The Poetry Corner

The Invocation Of Lucretius

By John Collings Squire, Sir

BOOK I Mother of Rome, delight of gods and men, Beloved Venus, who under the fleeting stars Fillest the freighted sea and earth's ripe fields, O since through thee alone all forms of life Are born, and climb into the sun's sweet light, Goddess, before whose lovely advancing feet The winds and towering clouds scatter and flee, And the labouring earth discloses odorous flowers, And the sea falls into a shining calm, And the assuaged heavens mellow with light. For when the spring-like face of day awakes, And the West Wind, unloosed, flies procreant forth, Then first the coursing birds, smitten at heart, Betray, Lady, thy entrance and thy power, And then the beasts caper in happy pastures And swim swift floods; so all created things, Captive to thee, drawn by their own desire, Stray through the world where'er thy presence leads. Through all the seas and hills and swelling streams, Wing-fluttering woods and green, luxuriant plains, Thou harryest them with lust, that none shall fail To carry their eternal races on. Since then thou art sole queen of all that Is, And without thee to help can nothing rise To cross the glorious frontiers of the light, And nothing grow in gentleness or grace, Thee do I pray to aid my labouring verse, Now that of all that Is I strive to sing, Lady, for my dear Memmian heir, whom thou Hast blest with every constant excellence; For his sake, chiefly, fill my words with life.