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rown! By thee the seeds of conscious worth are fir'd, Hero by hero, fame by fame inspir'd: Without thine aid how soon the hero dies! By thee upborne, his name ascends the skies. This Ammon[396] knew, and own'd his Homer's lyre The noblest glory of Pelides' ire.[397] This knew Augustus, and from Mantua's shade To courtly ease the Roman bard convey'd;[398] And soon exulting flow'd the song divine, The noblest glory of the Roman line. Dear was the Muse to Julius; ever dear To Scipio, though the pond'rous, conquering spear Roughen'd his hand, th' immortal pen he knew, And, to the tented field the gentle Muses drew. Each glorious chief of Greek or Latian line, Or barb'rous race, adorn'd the Aonian shrine; Each glorious name, e'er to the Muse endear'd. Or woo'd the Muses, or, the Muse rever'd. Alas, on Tago's hapless shores alone The Muse is slighted, and her charms unknown; For this, no Virgil here attunes the lyre, No Homer here awakes the hero's fire. On Tago's shores are Scipios, Caesars born, And Alexanders Lisbon's clime adorn; But, Heaven has stamp'd them in a rougher mould, Nor gave the polish to their genuine gold. Careless and rude, or to be known or know, In vain, to them, the sweetest numbers flow: Unheard, in vain their native poet sings, And cold neglect weighs down the Muse's wings, Ev'n he whose veins the blood of GAMA warms,[399] Walks by, unconscious of the Muse's charms: For him no Muse shall leave her golden loom, No palm shall blossom, and no wreath shall bloom: Yet, shall my labours and my cares be paid By fame immortal, and by GAMA'S shade: Him shall the song on ev'ry shore proclaim, The first of heroes, first of naval fame. Rude, and ungrateful, though my country be, This proud example shall be taught by me-- "Where'er the hero's worth demands the skies, To crown that worth some gen'rous bard shall rise!" END OF THE FIFTH BOOK. BOOK VI. THE ARGUMENT. Gama's long recital being concluded, the poet resumes the thread of his story in his own person. The Portuguese admiral enters into an alliance with the King of Melinda, assures him that the vessels of his nation will always in future anchor on his shores. Gama receives from the monarch a faithful pilot to conduct him to India. Bacchus now has recourse to Neptun
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