SPARABELLA.HE wailings of a maiden I recite, A maiden fair, that Sparabella hight, Such strains ne'er warble in the linnets throat, Nor the gay goldfinch chaunts so sweet a note,No magpye chatter'd, nor the painted jay,[2] 5No Ox was heard to low, nor Ass to bray. No rustling breezes play'd the leaves among, While thus her madrigal the damsel sung.
- ↑ Dumps, or Dumbs, made use of to express a fit of the sullens. Some have pretended that it is derived from Dumops a king of Egypt, that built a pyramid and dy'd of melancholy. So Mopes after the same manner, is thought to have come from Merops another Egyptian king, that dy'd of the same distemper; but our English antiquaries have conjectur'd, that dumps, which is, a grievous heaviness of spirits, comes from the word dumplin, the heaviest kind of pudding that is eaten in this country, much used in Norfolk, and other counties of England.
- ↑ L. 5. Immemor Herbarum quos est mirata juvenca Certantes quorum stupefactæ carmine Lynces; Et mutata suos requierunt flumina cursus.Virg.
A while