DAMON AND CUPID

The sun was now withdrawn,

The shepherds home were sped;

The moon wide o’er the lawn

Her silver mantle spread;

When Damon stayed behind,

And sauntered in the grove:

“Will ne’er a nymph be kind,

And give me love for love?

“O! those were golden hours,

When Love, devoid of cares,

In all Arcadia’s bowers

Lodged nymphs and swains by pairs;

But now from wood and plain

Flies every sprightly lass;

No joys for me remain,

In shades, or on the grass.”

The wingèd boy draws near,

And thus the swain reproves:

“While Beauty revelled here,

My game lay in the groves;

At court I never fail

To scatter round my arrows:

Men fall as thick as hail,

And maidens love like sparrows.

“Then, swain, if me you need,

Straight lay your sheep-hook down;

Throw by your oaten reed,

And haste away to town.

So well I’m known at court,

None ask where Cupid dwells:

But readily resort

To Bellendens or Lepels.”

John Gay.