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Ode To Apollo. On An Inkglass Almost Dried In The Sun.

By William Cowper

Topics: classic

Patron of all those luckless brains,     That, to the wrong side leaning,     Indite much metre with much pains,     And little or no meaning;     Ah why, since oceans, rivers, streams,     That water all the nations,     Pay tribute to thy glorious beams,     In constant exhalations;     Why, stooping from the noon of day,     Too covetous of drink,     Apollo, hast thou stolen away     A poets drop of ink?     Upborne into the viewless air,     It floats a vapour now,     Impelld through regions dense and rare,     By all the winds that blow.     Ordaind perhaps, ere summer flies,     Combined with millions more,     To form an iris in the skies,     Though black and foul before.     Illustrious drop! and happy then     Beyond the happiest lot,     Of all that ever passd my pen,     So soon to be forgot!     Phbus, if such be thy design,     To place it in thy bow,     Give wit, that what is left may shine     With equal grace below.

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Author:William Cowper

"Patron of all those luckless brains,..." by William Cowper

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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"

William Cowper

About William Cowper

William Cowper (1731–1800) was an English poet and hymnodist whose work bridges the gap between the Augustan age and Romanticism. His poems "The Task" and "John Gilpin" were enormously popular, and his hymn "God Moves in a Mysterious Way" remains widely sung.

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