Pleasures that gain or praise cannot bestow,

Yet can dilate and raise them when they flow.

For this the Poet looks thy world around,

Where form and life and reasoning man are found;

He loves the mind, in all its modes, to trace,

And all the manners of the changing race;

Silent he walks the road of life along,

And views the aims of its tumultuous throng:

He finds what shapes the Proteus-passions take,

And what strange waste of life and joy they make,