The Poetical Works of Thomas Tickell/To Sir Godfrey Kneller

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search

TO SIR GODFREY KNELLER,

AT HIS COUNTRY SEAT.

To Whitton's shades and Hounslow's airy plain
Thou, Kneller! tak'st thy summer flights in vain,
In vain thy wish gives all thy rural hours
To the fair villa and wellorder'd bow'rs;
To court thy pencil early at thy gates 5
Ambition knocks and fleeting Beauty waits;
The boastful Muse of others' fame so sure
Implores thy aid to make her own secure:
The Great, the Fair, and if aught nobler be,
Aught more belov'd, the Arts solicit thee. 10
How canst thou hope to fly the world, in vain
From Europe fever'd by the circling main,
Sought by the kings of ev'ry distant land,
And ev'ry hero worthy of thy hand?
Hast thou forgot that mighty Bourbon fear'd 15
He still was mortal till thy draught appear'd?
That Cosmo chose thy glowing form to place
Amidst her masters of the Lombard race?
See on her Titian's and her Guido's urns
Her falling arts forlorn Hesperia mourns, 20
While Britain wins each garland from her brow,
Her wit and freedom first, her painting now.
Let the faint copier on old Tiber's shore,
Nor mean the task, each breathing bust explore,
Line after line with painful patience trace, 25
This Roman grandeur that Athenian grace;
Vain care of parts: if, impotent of soul,
Th' industrious workman fails to warm the whole,
Each theft betrays the marble whence it came,
And a cold statue stiffens in the frame. 30
Thee Nature taught, nor Art her aid deny'd,
The kindest mistress and the surest guide,
To catch a likeness at one piercing sight,
And place the fairest in the fairest light.
Ere yet thy pencil tries her nicer toils, 35
Or on thy palette lie the blended oils,
Thy careless chalk has half achiev'd thy art,
And her just image makes Cleora start.
A mind that grasps the whole is rarely found;
Half-learn'd, half-painters, and half-wits, abound. 40
Few like thy genius at proportion aim,
All great, all graceful, and throughout the same.
Such be thy life. O since the glorious rage
That fir'd thy youth flames unsubdu'd by age,
Tho' wealth nor fame now touch thy sated mind, 45
Still tinge the canvass, bounteous to mankind!
Since after thee may rise an impious line,
Coarse manglers of the human face divine,
Paint on till Fate dissolve thy mortal part,
And live and die the monarch of thy art. 50