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POST SCRIPT.

I MUST help my preface by a postscript, to

tell the reader, that there are ten years distance between my writing the one and the other; and that (whatever I thought then, and have fomewhere faid, that I would publish no more poetry) he will find several copies of verses scattered through this edition, which were not printed in the first. Those relating to the publick stand in the order they did before, and according to the feveral years, in which they were written; however the difpofition of our national affairs, the actions, or the fortunes of fome men, and the opinions of others may have changed. Profe, and other human things may take what turn they can; but poetry, which pretends to have fomething of divinity in it, is to be more permanent. Odes once printed cannot well be al

tered,

tered, when the author has already faid, that he expects his works fhould live forever. And it had been very foolish in my friend Horace, if fome years after his Exegi Monumentum, he should have defired to see his building taken down again.

The dedication likewife is reprinted to the Earl of Dorset, in the foregoing leaves, without any alteration; though I had the faireft opportunity, and the ftrongeft inclination to have added a great deal to it. The blooming hopes, which I faid the world expected from my then very young patron, have been confirmed by moft noble and diftinguished first-fruits; and his life is going on towards a plentiful harvest of all accumulated virtues. He has in fact exceeded whatever the fondness of my wishes could invent in his favour: his equally good and beautiful lady enjoys in him an indulgent, and obliging husband; his children, a kind and careful father; and his acquaintance, a faithful, generous, and polite friend. His fellow-peers have attended to the perfuafion of his eloquence; and have been convinced by the folidity of his reasoning. He has long fince deferved and attained the honour of the garter. He has managed fome of the greatest charges of the kingdom with known

ability;

ability; and laid them down with entire difintereftment. And as he continues the exercises of these eminent virtues (which that he may do to a very old age, fhall be my perpetual with, he may be one of the greatest men that our age, or poffibly our nation has bred; and leave materials for a panegyric, not unworthy the pen of fome future Pliny.

From fo noble a fubject as the Earl of Dorfet, to fo mean a one as myself, is (I confess) a very pindaric transition. I fhall only fay one word, and trouble the reader no farther. I published my poems formerly, as Monfieur Jourdain fold his filk he would not be thought a tradesman; but ordered fome pieces to be measured out to his particular friends. Now I give up my fhop, and difpofe of all my poetical goods at once: I muft therefore defire, that the public would please to take them in the grofs; and that every body would turn over what he does not like.

THE

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ON EXOD. III, 14.—I AM THAT I AM.

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WRITTEN IN 1688, AS AN EXERCISE AT ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE.

I.

MAN! foolish man!

Scarce know'st thou how thyself began ; Scarce haft thou thought enough to prove thou art; Yet fteel'd with study'd boldness, thou dar❜st try To fend thy doubting reason's dazzled eye Through the mysterious gulph of vaft immensity. Much thou canst there difcern, much thence impart.

Vain wretch! fupprefs thy knowing pride;
Mortify thy learned luft!

Vain are thy thoughts, while thou thyfelf art duft.
II.

Let Wit her fails, her oars let Wisdom lend;
The helm let politick Experience guide:

Yet cease to hope thy fhort-liv'd bark shall ride
Down fpreading Fate's unnavigable tide.
What, though ftill it farther tend?

Still 'tis farther from its end;

And, in the bofom of that boundless fea,
Still finds its error lengthen with its way.
III.

With daring pride and infolent delight

Your doubts refolv'd you boast, your labours crown'd; And "EYPHKA! your god, forfooth is found

Incomprehenfible and infinite.

But is he therefore found? vain fearcher! no:

Let your imperfect definition show,

That nothing you, the weak definer, know.

IV.

Say, why fhould the collected main

Itself within itself contain?

Why to its caverns should it sometimes creep,
And with delighted filence fleep

On the lov'd bofom of it's parent deep?
Why should it's numerous waters stay

In comely difcipline, and fair array,

Till winds and tides exert their high command?

Then

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