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Spare your comparisons, (replied
An angry Rose, who grew beside)
Of all mankind you should not flout us;
What can a Poet do without us!
In every love-song Roses bloom;
We lend you colour and perfume:
Does it to Chloe's charms conduce,
To found her praise on our abuse?
Must we, to flatter her, be made
To wither, envy, pine, and fade?'

THE

CUR, HORSE, AND SHEPHERD'S DOG.

THE lad of all-sufficient merit
With modesty ne'er damps his spirit;

Presuming on his own deserts,

On all alike his tongue exerts :
His noisy jokes at random throws,
And pertly spatters friends and foes.
In wit and war the bully race
Contribute to their own disgrace:
Too late the forward youth shall find
That jokes are sometimes paid in kind;
Or if they canker in the breast,
He makes a foe who makes a jest..
A village Cur, of snappish race,
The pertest puppy of the place,
Imagined that his treble throat

Was bless'd with Music's sweetest note;
In the mid road he basking lay,

The yelping nuisance of the way;

For not a creature pass'd along

But had a sample of his song.
Soon as the trotting Steed he hears,
He starts, he cocks his dapper ears;
Away he scowers, assaults his hoof;
Now near him snarls, now barks aloof;
With shrill impertinence attends,
Nor leaves him till the village ends.
It chanced, upon his evil day,
A Pad came pacing down the way;
The Cur, with never-ceasing tongue,
Upon the passing traveller sprung.
The Horse, from scorn provoked to ire,
Flung backward; rolling in the mire,
The Puppy howl'd, and bleeding lay;
The Pad in peace pursued his way.

A Shepherd's Dog, who saw the deed,
Detesting the vexatious breed,

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Bespoke him thus: When coxcombs prate,
They kindle wrath, contempt, or hate;
Thy teasing tongue had judgment tied,
Thou hadst not like a puppy died.'

THE

COURT OF DEATH.

DEATH, on a solemn night of state,
In all his pomp of terror sat:

The' attendants of his gloomy reign,
Diseases dire, a ghastly train!
Crowd the vast court.

With hollow tone

A voice thus thunder'd from the throne:

'This night our minister we name,
Let every servant speak his claim ;
Merit shall bear this ebon wand.'
All, at the word, stretch'd forth their hand.
Fever, with burning heat possess'd,
Advanced, and for the wand address'd:
I to the weekly bills appeal,

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Let those express my fervent zeal ;

On every slight occasion near,

With violence I persevere.'

Next Gout appears, with limping pace, Pleads how he shifts from place to place; From head to foot how swift he flies, And every joint and sinew plies; Still working when he seems suppress'd, A most tenacious stubborn guest.

A haggard Spectre from the crew Crawls forth, and thus asserts his due: 'Tis I who taint the sweetest joy, And in the shape of Love destroy :

My shanks, sunk eyes, and noseless face,
Prove my pretension to the place.'

Stone urged his ever-growing force;
And, next, Consumption's meagre corse,
With feeble voice, that scarce was heard,
Broke with short coughs, his suit preferr'd:
Let none object my lingering way,
I gain, like Fabius, by delay;
Fatigue and weaken every foe
By long attack, secure, though slow.'
Plague represents his rapid power,
Who thinn'd a nation in an hour.

All spoke their claim, and hoped the wand.

Now expectation hush'd the band,

When thus the Monarch from the throne:
'Merit was ever modest known.

What, no Physician speak his right!
None here! but fees their toils requite.
Let then Intemperance take the wand,
Who fills with gold their zealous hand.
You, Fever, Gout, and all the rest,
(Whom wary men, as foes, detest)
Forego your claim; no more pretend;
Intemperance is esteem'd a friend;
He shares their mirth, their social joys,
And as a courted guest destroys:
The charge on him must justly fall,
Who finds employment for you all.'

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THE

GARDENER AND THE HOG.

A GARDENER of peculiar taste
On a young Hog his favour placed,
Who fed not with the common herd;
His tray was to the hall preferr'd :
He wallow'd underneath the board,
Or in his master's chamber snored,
Who fondly stroked him every day,
And taught him all the puppy's play.
Where'er he went, the grunting friend
Ne'er fail'd his pleasure to attend.
As on a time the loving pair
Walk'd forth to tend the garden's care,
The Master thus address'd the Swine :
My house, my garden, all is thine.
On turnips feast whene'er you please,
And riot in my beans and peas;
If the potatoe's taste delights,

Or the red carrot's sweet invites,
Indulge thy morn and evening hours;
But let due care regard my flowers:
My tulips are my garden's pride :
What vast expense those beds supplied!'
The Hog by chance one morning roam'd, ́
Where with new ale the vessels foam'd ;
He munches now the steaming grains,
Now with full swill the liquor drains.
Intoxicating fumes arise;

He reels, he rolls his winking eyes ;

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