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An Epistle. Desiring The Queen's Picture, But Left Unfinished, By The Sudden News Of Her Majesty's Death

By Matthew Prior

Topics: classic

The train of equipage and pomp of state, The shining sideboard and the burnish'd plate, Let other ministers, great Anne, require, And partial fall thy gift to their desire. To the fair Portrait of my sovereign dame, To that alone eternal be my claim. My bright defender, and my dread delight, If ever I found favour in thy sight; If all the pains that for thy Britain's sake My past has took, or future life may take, Be grateful to my Queen, permit my prayer, And with this gift reward my total care. Will thy indulgent hand, fair Saint, allow The boon?    and will thy ear accept the vow? That, in despite of age, of impious flame, And eating Time, thy Picture, like thy fame, Entire may last, that, as their eyes survey The semblant shade, men yet unborn may say, Thus great, thus gracious, look'd Britannia's Queen, Her brow thus smooth, her look was thus serene; When to a low but to a loyal hand The mighty Empress gave her high command, That he to hostile camps and kings should haste, To speak her vengeance, as their danger, past; To say, she wills detested wars to cease; She checks her conquest for her subjects' ease, And bids the world attend her terms of peace. Thee, gracious Anne, thee present I adore, Thee, Queen of Peace,    If Time and Fate have power Higher to raise the glories of thy reign In words sublimer and a nobler strain, May future bards the mighty theme rehearse! Here, Stator Jove, and Phoebus king of verse, The votive tablet I suspend.

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Author:Matthew Prior

"The train of equipage and pomp of state,..." by Matthew Prior

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Matthew Prior

About Matthew Prior

Matthew Prior (1664–1721) was an English poet and diplomat. His poem "Alma: or, The Progress of the Mind" and his epitaph "Nobles and heralds, by your leave" are witty Augustan verse.

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