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And for reward shall share the feast,
I mean, shall pick my bones at least.'
'Till now, (the' astonish'd Cur replies)
'I look'd on all with envious eyes.
How false we judge by what appears!
All creatures feel their several cares.
If thus yon mighty beast complains,
Perhaps man knows superior pains.
Let envy then no more torment:
Think on the Ox, and learn content.'
Thus said, close following at her heel,
With cheerful heart he mounts the wheel.'

THE

RAVENS, SEXTON, AND EARTH-WORM.

TO LAURA.

LAURA, methinks you're over nice.
True; flattery is a shocking vice;
Yet sure, whene'er the praise is just,
One may commend without disgust.
Am I a privilege denied,

Indulg'd by every tongue beside?
How singular are all your ways!
A woman, and averse to praise!
If 'tis offence such truths to tell,
Why do your merits thus excel?
Since then I dare not speak my mind,
A truth conspicuous to mankind;
Though in full lustre every grace
Distinguish your celestial face;

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Though beauties of inferior ray
(Like stars before the orb of day)
Turn pale and fade; I check my lays,
Admiring what I dare not praise.

If you the tribute due disdain,
The Muse's mortifying strain
Shall, like a woman in mere spite,
Set beauty in a moral light.

Though such revenge might shock the ear

Of many a celebrated fair,

I mean that superficial race

Whose thoughts ne'er reach beyond their face, What's that to you? I but displease

Such ever-girlish ears as these.

Virtue can brook the thoughts of age,
That lasts the same through every stage.
Though you by time must suffer more
Than ever woman lost before,
To age is such indifference shown,
As if your face were not your own.
Were you by Antoninus taught?
Or is it native strength of thought
That thus, without concern or fright,
You view yourself by Reason's light?
Those eyes, of so divine a ray,
What are they? mouldering, mortal clay.
Those features, cast in heavenly mould,
Shall, like my coarser earth, grow old;
Like common grass the fairest flow'r
Must feel the hoary season's pow'r.
How weak, how vain, is human pride!

Dares man upon himself confide?
The wretch who glories in his gain,
Amasses heaps on heaps in vain.

Why lose we life in anxious cares,
To lay in hoards for future years?
Can those (when tortur'd by disease)
Cheer our sick heart, or purchase ease?
Can those prolong one gasp of breath,
Or calm the troubled hour of death?
What's beauty? Call ye that your own?
A flower that fades as soon as blown.
What's man in all his boast of sway?—
Perhaps the tyrant of a day.

Alike the laws of life take place
Through every branch of human race:
The monarch of long regal line
Was rais'd from dust as frail as mine.
Can he pour health into his veins?
Or cool the fever's restless pains?
Can he (worn down in Nature's course)
New-brace his feeble nerves with force?
Can he (how vain is mortal pow'r!)
Stretch life beyond the destin'd hour?

Consider, man; weigh well thy frame; The king, the beggar is the same.

⚫ Dust form'd us all. Each breathes his day,
Then sinks into his native clay.
Beneath a venerable yew,

That in the lonely churchyard grew,
Two Ravens sate. In solemn croak
Thus one his hungry friend bespoke.

• Methinks I scent some rich repast;
The savour strengthens with the blast
Snuff then, the promis'd feast inhale;
I taste the carcass in the gale.
Near yonder trees, the farmer's steed,
From toil and every drudgery freed,

Hath groan'd his last: a dainty treat!
To birds of taste delicious meat.'
A Sexton, busy at his trade,

To hear their chat suspends his spade.
Death struck him with no farther thought,
Than merely as the fees he brought.
Was ever two such blundering fowls,
In brains and manners less than owls!
Blockheads, (says he) learn more respect :
Know ye on whom ye thus reflect?
In this same grave (who does me right,
Must own the work is strong and tight)
The 'Squire that yon' fair hall possest,
To-night shall lay his bones at rest.
Whence could the gross mistake proceed?
The 'Squire was somewhat fat indeed.
What then? the meanest bird of prey
Such want of sense could ne'er betray;
For sure some difference must be found
(Suppose the smelling organ sound)
In carcasses, (say what we can)
Or where's the dignity of man?'
With due respect to human race,
The Ravens undertook the case.
In such similitude of scent,

Man ne'er could think reflections meant.
As epicures extol a treat,

And seem their savoury words to eat,
They prais'd dead horse, luxurious food,
The venison of the prescient brood.
The Sexton's indignation mov'd,
The mean comparison reprov'd;
Their undiscerning palate blam'd,
Which two-legg'd carrion thus defam'd.

Reproachful speech from either side
The want of argument supplied:
They rail, revile; as often ends
The contest of disputing friends.

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Hold, (says the fowl) since human pride With confutation ne'er complied,

Let's state the case, and then refer
The knotty point, for taste may err.'
As thus he spoke, from out the mould
An Earth-worm, huge of size, unroll'd
His monstrous length: they straight agree
To choose him as their referee :
So to the' experience of his jaws
Each states the merits of the cause.
He paus'd, and with a solemn tone,
Thus made his sage opinion known:
On carcasses of every kind

This maw hath elegantly din'd;
Provok'd by luxury or need,
On beast, or fowl, or man, I feed:
Such small distinction's in the savour,
By turns I choose the fancied flavour:
Yet I must own (that human beast)
A glutton is the rankest feast.

Man, cease this boast; for human pride
Hath various tracts to range beside.
The prince who kept the world in awe,
The judge whose dictate fix'd the law;
The rich, the poor, the great, the small,
Are levell'd; death confounds 'em all.
Then think not that we reptiles share
Such cates, such elegance of fare;
The only true and real good
Of man was never vermin's food:

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