ORCHIS. 
131 
It mounts not on obtrusive wine. 
Nor threats thy breast with angry sting: 
Admire, as close the insect lies, 
Its thin-wrought plume and honey’d thighs : 
Whilst on this fiow’ret’s velvet breast, 
It seems as though ’twere lull’d to rest, 
Nor might its fairy wings unfold, 
Enchain’d in aromatic gold. 
Think not to set the captive free — 
’T is but the picture of a bee. 
\ et wonder not that Nature’s power 
Should paint an insect in a flower; 
And stoop to means that bear in part 
Resemblance to imperfect art — 
Nature, who could that form inspire 
With strength and swiftness, life and fire, 
And bid it search each spicy vale 
Where flowers their fragrant souls exhale; 
And, labouring for the parent hive, 
With murmurs make the wild alive. 
For when in Parian stone we trace 
Some best-remember’d form or face; 
Or see on radiant canvass rise 
An imitative Paradise; 
And feel the warm affections glow, 
Pleased at the pencil’s mimic show; 
