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The Owl Describing her Young Ones.
1 WHY was that baleful Creature made,
2 Which seeks our Quiet to invade,
3 And screams ill Omens through the Shade?
4 'Twas, sure, for every Mortals good,
5 When, by wrong painting of her Brood,
6 She doom'd them for the Eagle's Food:
7 Who proffer'd Safety to her Tribe,
8 Wou'd she but shew them or describe,
9 And serving him, his Favour bribe.
10 When thus she did his Highness tell:
11 In Looks my Young do all excel,
12 Nor Nightingales can sing so well.
13 You'd joy to see the pretty Souls,
14 With wadling Steps and frowzy Poles,
15 Come creeping from their secret Holes.
16 But I ne'er let them take the Air,
17 The Fortune-hunters do so stare;
18 And Heiresses indeed they are.
19 This ancient Yew three hundred Years,
20 Has been possess'd by Lineal Heirs:
21 The Males extinct, now All is Theirs.
22 I hope I've done their Beauties right,
23 Whose Eyes outshine the Stars by Night;
24 Their Muffs and Tippets too are White.
25 The King of Cedars wav'd his Power,
26 And swore he'd fast ev'n from that Hour,
27 Ere he'd such Lady Birds devour.
28 Th' Agreement seal'd, on either part,
29 The Owl now promis'd, from her Heart,
30 All his Night-Dangers to divert;
31 As Centinel to stand and whoop,
32 If single Fowl, or Shoal, or Troop
33 Should at his Palace aim or stoop.
34 But home, one Evening without Meat,
35 The Eagle comes, and takes his Seat,
36 Where they did these Conditions treat.
37 The Mother-Owl was prol'd away,
38 To seek abroad for needful Prey,
39 And forth the Misses came to play.
40 What's here! the hungry Monarch cry'd,
41 When near him living Flesh he spy'd,
42 With which he hop'd to be supply'd.
43 But recollecting, 'twas the Place,
44 Where he'd so lately promis'd Grace
45 To an enchanting, beauteous Race;
46 He paus'd a while, and kept his Maw,
47 With sober Temperance, in awe,
48 Till all their Lineaments he saw.
49 What are these Things, and of what Sex,
50 At length he cry'd, with Vultur's Becks,
51 And Shoulders higher than their Necks?
52 These wear no Palatines, nor Muffs,
53 Italian Silks, or Doyley Stuffs,
54 But motley Callicoes, and Ruffs.
55 Nor Brightness in their Eyes is seen,
56 But through the Film a dusky Green,
57 And like old Margery is their Mien.
58 Then for my Supper they're design'd,
59 Nor can be of that lovely Kind,
60 To whom my Pity was inclin'd.
61 No more Delays; as soon as spoke,
62 The Plumes are strippd, the Grisles broke,
63 And near the Feeder was to choak.
64 When now return'd the grizly Dame,
65 (Whose Family was out of Frame)
66 Against League-Breakers does exclaim.
67 How! quoth the Lord of soaring Fowls,
68 (Whilst horribly she wails and howls)
69 Were then your Progeny but Owls?
70 I thought some Phoenix was their Sire,
71 Who did those charming Looks inspire,
72 That you'd prepar'd me to admire.
73 Upon your self the Blame be laid;
74 My Talons you've to Blood betray'd,
75 And ly'd in every Word you said.
76 Faces or Books, beyond their Worth extoll'd,
77 Are censur'd most, and thus to pieces pull'd.
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fable
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Winchilsea, Anne Kingsmill Finch, Countess of, 1661-1720. Miscellany poems, on several occasions: Written by the Right Honble Anne, Countess of Winchilsea. London: printed for J. B. and sold by Benj. Tooke, William Taylor, and James Round, 1713, pp. 104-108. [8],390p. ; 8⁰. (ESTC T94539; Foxon pp. 274-5; OTA K076314.000) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Bodleian Library [Buxton 100].)
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Other works by Anne Finch (née Kingsmill), countess of Winchilsea
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- Democritus and his Neighbours. Imitated from Fontaine. ()
- A Description of One of the Pieces of Tapistry at Long-Leat, made after the famous Cartons of Raphael; in which, Elymas the Sorcerer is miraculously struck Blind by St. Paul before Sergius Paulus, the Proconsul of Asia. Inscribed to the Honble HENRY THYNNE, under the Name of THEANOR. ()
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- The Eagle, the Sow, and the Cat. ()
- Enquiry after Peace. A Fragment. ()
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- The EQUIPAGE. Written Originally in FRENCH by L'Abbé Reigner. ()
- The EXECUTOR. ()
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- FRAGMENT. ()
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- The Hog, the Sheep, and Goat carrying to a FAIR. ()
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- The House of Socrates. ()
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- JEALOUSY. A SONG. ()
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- The King and the Shepherd. Imitated from the French. ()
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- MERCURY and the ELEPHANT. A Prefatory FABLE. ()
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- A Pastoral DIALOGUE between Two Shepherdesses. ()
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- The Philosopher, the Young Man, and his Statue. ()
- The PHOENIX. A SONG. ()
- A Pindarick Poem Upon the Hurricane in November 1703, referring to this Text in Psalm 148. ver. 8. Winds and Storms fulfilling his Word. ()
- A POEM for the Birth-day of the Right Honble the Lady CATHARINE TUFTON. Occasion'd by sight of some Verses upon that Subject for the preceding Year, compos'd by no Eminent Hand. ()
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- The Shepherd Piping to the Fishes. ()
- A SONG. ()
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- [Tasso, Aminta:] AMINTOR, being ask'd by THIRSIS Who is the Object of his Love? speaks as follows. ()
- [Tasso, Aminta:] Daphne's Answer to Sylvia, declaring she should esteem all as Enemies, who should talk to her of LOVE. ()
- [Tasso, Aminta:] From the AMINTA of TASSO. ()
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- There's No To-Morrow, A FABLE imitated from Sir Roger L'Estrange. ()
- To a Friend, in Praise of the Invention of Writing Letters. ()
- To DEATH. ()
- To Edward Jenkinson, Esq a very young Gentleman, who writ a Poem on PEACE. ()
- To Mr. F. now Earl of W. Who going abroad, had desired ARDELIA to write some Verses upon whatever Subject she thought fit, against his Return in the Evening. ()
- To the NIGHTINGALE. ()
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- The Young RAT and his DAM, the COCK and the CAT. ()