Court Odes: Oh touch the string, celestial muse


 Selected item (#2056) = Oh touch the string, celestial muse
 Attributes of this item 
incipit (first line(s), normalized): Oh touch the string, celestial muse
version (if more than one exists):
the item's genre (general): ode
the item's genre (specific): Birthday, George I
the institution/place or purpose 
for which the work was first destined:
English court
the work's year (or focal date, if known): 1718
author of the text: Nicholas Rowe
composer of the music: John Eccles
Number of texts stored: 1  
  • Selected text (below): #153 / Source: Samuel Johnson, The Works of the English Poets, vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 82–3
 Selected text (#153) / Source: Samuel Johnson, The Works of the English Poets, vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 82–3  
 Attributes of the selected text 
source for this text
(short title, or library & shelfmark):
Samuel Johnson, The Works of the English Poets
location in the source?
(i.e. which vol., pp. or fols):
vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 82–3
type of source: print, literary text, anthology
the source online (if available):
modern edition of this text:
special title (if any):
version (if more than one exists):
about this transcription:
Transcription:          
   File options:

For the King’s birth-day, 1718.

Oh touch the string, celestial Muse, and say,
Why are peculiar times and seasons blest?
Is it in fate, that one distinguish’d day
Should with more hallow’d purple paint the east?

Look on life and nature’s race!
How the careless minutes pass,
How they wear a common face:
One is what another was!
Till the happy hero’s worth
Bid the festival stand forth;
Till the golden light he crown,
Till he mark it for his own.

How had this glorious morning been forgot,
Unthought-of as the things that never were;
Had not our greatest Caesar been its lot,
And call’d it from amongst the vulgar year!

Now, Nature, be gay
In the pride of thy May,
To court let thy graces repair;
Let Flora bestow
The crown from her brow,
For our brighter Britannia to wear.

Through every language of thy peopled Earth,
Far as the sea’s or Caesar’s influence goes,
Let thankful nations celebrate his birth,
And bless the author of the world’s repose.

Let Volga tumbling in cascades,
And Po that glides through poplar shades,
And Tagus bright in sands of gold,
And Arethusa, rivers old,
Their great deliverer sing.
Not, Danube, thou whose winding flood
So long has blush’d with Turkish blood,
To Caesar shall refuse a strain,
Since now thy streams without a stain
Run crystal as their spring.

CHORUS.

To mighty George, that heals thy wounds,
That names thy kings and marks thy bounds,
The joyful voice, O Europe, raise:
In the great mediator’s praise
Let all thy various tongues combine,
And Britain’s festival be thine.


Enquire about this database   |   Account login