THE 



ENGLISH GARDEN, 



BOOK THE FOURTH. 



NO R yet withdraw thy aid, thou NYMPH divine ! * 

 That aid aufpicious, which, in Art's domain, 

 Already has reform'd whate'er prevail'd 

 Of foreign, or of falfe ; has led the curve 

 That Nature loves thro' all her fylvan haunts j 5 



Has ftol'n the fence unnotic'd that arrefts 

 Her vagrant herds ; giv'n luftre to her lawns, 

 Gloom to her groves, and, in expanfe ferene, 

 Devolv'd that wat'ry mirror at her foot, 

 O'er which flie loves to bend and view her charms. 10 



B And 



* SIMPLICITY. See the beginning of the Poem. The following lines recapitulate the 

 fubjeft of the three preceding Bocks. The id to the paufe in ver. 4th; the zd from 

 thence to that in ver. 7th ; and the third finilhes with the paragraph. 



