aa(5 FLORA DOMESTICA. 



The stalke was even and grene upright^ 

 It was thereon a godely sight." 



The short-lived beauty of the Rosehasgiven rise to many 

 reflections and comparisons ; as in Crashaw's hnes on the 

 death of Mr. Herrys: an instance occurs also in Mr. 

 Bowring's translation from the Russian of Kostrov : 



" The rose is my favorite flower : 



On its tablets of crimson I swore. 



That up to my last living hour 



I never would think of thee more. 

 " I scarcely the record had made. 



Ere Zephyr, in frolicsome play. 



On his light airy pinions conveyed 



Both tablets and promise away." 



Bowring's Russian Anthology. 



And a beautiful one in Tasso : 



" Deh mira, egli canto spuntar la rosa 

 Dal verde suo modesta e verginella, 

 Che mezzo aperta ancora e mezzo ascosa, 

 Quanto si mostra men, tanto e piu bella. 

 Ecco poi nudo il sen gia baldanzosa 

 Dispiega : ecco poi langue, e non par quella ; 

 Quella non par, che desiata avanti 

 Fu da mille donzelle e mille amanti. 



" Cosi trapassa al trapassar d'un giorno 

 Delia vita mortale il fiore, e '1 verde." 

 La Gerusalemma Liberata di Tasso: Canto 16. 



" The gentle budding rose, quoth she, behold, 

 That first scant peeping forth with virgin beams. 

 Half ope, half shut, her beauties doth upfold 

 In its fair leaves, and, less seen fairer seems ; 

 And after spreads them forth more broad and bold. 

 Then languisheth, and dies in last extremes : 

 Nor seems the same, that decked bed and bower 

 Of many a lady late, and paramour : 



" So, in the passing of a day, doth pass 

 The bud and blossom of the life of man." 



Fairfax's Translation. 



" Tum pater Anchises magnum cratera corona 

 Induit, implevitque mero." 



ViuGiL, Eneid, book 3. 



