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His fortune squander'd, leaves his virtue bare
To every bribe, and blind to every snare:
Clodio for bread his indolence must quit,
Or turn a soldier, or commence a wit.
Such heroes have we! all, but life, they stake;
How must Spain tremble, and the German shake!
Such writers have we! all, but sense, they print;
E'en George's praise is dated from the Mint.
In arms contemptible, in arts profane,

Your power is fixt, your fame through time con-
vey'd,

And Britain Europe's queen-if I am paid."
A statesman has his answer in a trice;
"Sir, such a genius is beyond all price;
What man can pay for this?"-Away he turns:
His work is folded, and his bosom burns:
His patron he will patronise no more;
But rushes like a tempest out of door.

Such swords, such pens, disgrace a monarch's reign. Lost is the patriot, and extinct his name!
Reform your lives before you thus aspire,
And steal (for you can steal) celestial fire.

O! the just contrast! O! the beauteous strife! 'T wixt their cool writings, and Pindaric life: They write with phelgm, but then they live with fire;

They cheat the lender, and their works the buyer.
I reverence misfortune, not deride;

I pity poverty, but laugh at pride:

For who so sad, but must some mirth confess
At gay Castruchio's miscellaneous dress?

Out comes the piece, another, and the same;
For A, his magic pen evokes an O,
And turns the tide of Europe on the foe :
He rams his quill with scandal and with scoff;
But 't is so very foul, it won't go off:
Dreadful his thunders, while unprinted, roar;
But, when once publish'd, they are heard no more.
Thus distant bugbears fright; but, nearer draw,
The block's a block, and turns to mirth your awe.
Can those oblige, whose heads and hearts are
such?

Though there's but one of the dull works he wrote, No; every party 's tainted by their touch.
There's ten editions of his old lac'd coat.

These, Nature's commoners, who want a home,
Claim the wide world for their majestic dome;
They make a private study of the street;
And, looking full on every man they meet,
Kun souse against his chaps; who stands amaz'd
To find they did not see, but only gaz'd.
How must these bards be rapt into the skies?
You need not read, you feel their ecstasies.

Will they persist? 'Tis madness; Lintot, run,
See them confin'd—“ O, that's already done."
Most, as by leases, by the works they print,
Have took, for life, possession of the Mint.
If you mistake, and pity these poor men,
Est ulubris they cry, and write again.

Such wits their nuisance manfully expose,
And then pronounce just judges learning's foes;
O frail conclusion! the reverse is true;
If foes to learning, they 'd be friends to you:
Treat them, ye judges! with an honest scorn,
And weed the cockle from the generous corn:
There's true good-nature in your disrespect;
In justice to the good, the bad neglect:
For immortality, if hardships plead,

It is not theirs who write, but ours who read.
But, O! what wisdom can convince a fool,
But that 't is dulness to conceive him dull ?
"T is sad experience takes the censor's part,
Conviction, not from reason, but from smart.
A virgin-author, recent from the press,
The sheets yet wet, applauds his great success;
Surveys thein, reads them, takes their charms to
bed,

Those in his hand, and glory in his head :
"Tis joy too great; a fever of delight!
His heart beats thick, nor close his eyes all night:
But, rising the next morn to clasp his fame,
He finds that without sleeping he could dream:
So sparks, they say, take goddesses to bed,
And find next day the devil in their stead.

In vain advertisements the town o'erspread ;
They 're epitaphs, and say the work is dead.
Who press for fame, but small recruits will raise;
"T is volunteers alone can give the bays.

A famous author visits a great man,
Of his immortal work displays the plan,
And says, "Sir, I'm your friend; all fears dismiss;
Your glory, and my own, shall live by this;

Infected persons fly each public place;
And none, or enemies alone, embrace:
To the foul fiend their every passion's sold:
They love, and hate, extempore, for gold:
What image of their fury can we form?
Dulness and rage, a puddle in a storm.
Rest they in peace? If you are pleas'd to buy,
To swell your sails, like Lapland winds, they fly:
Write they with rage? The tempest quickly flags;
A state-Ulysses tames them with his bags;
Let him be what he will, Turk, Pagan, Jew;
For Christian ministers of state are few.

Behind the curtain lurks the fountain head,
That pours his politics through pipes of lead;
Which far and near ejaculate, and spout
O'er tea and coffee, poison to the rout:
But when they have bespatter'd all they may,
The statesman throws his filthy squirts away!
With golden forceps, these, another takes,
And state elixirs of the vipers makes.

The richest statesman wants wherewith to pay
A servile scycophant, if well they weigh
How much it costs the wretch to be so base;
Nor can the greatest powers enough disgrace,
Enough chastise, such prostitute applause,
If well they weigh how much it stains their cause.
But are our writers ever in the wrong?
Does virtue ne'er seduce the venal tongue ?
Yes; if well brib'd, for virtue's self they fight;
Still in the wrong, though champions for the right:
Whoe'er their crimes for interest only quit,
Sin on in virtue, and good deeds commit.

Nought but inconstancy Britannia meets,
And broken faith in their abandon'd sheets;
From the same hand how various is the page!
What civil war their brother pamphlets wage!
Tracts battle tracts, self-contradictions glare;
Say, is this lunacy?—I wish it were.
If such our writers, startled at the sight,
Felons may bless their stars they cannot write!
How justly Proteus' transmigrations fit
The monstrous changes of a modern wit!
Now such a gentle stream of eloquence
As seldom rises to the verge of sense;
Now, by mad rage, transform'd into a flame,
Which yet fit engines, well apply'd, can tame;
Now, on immodest trash, the swine obscene
Invites the town to sup at Drury-lane ;

A dreadful lion, now he roars at power,
Which sends him to his brothers at the Tower;
He's now a serpent, and his double tongue
Salutes, nay licks, the feet of those he stung;
What knot can bind him, his evasion such?
One knot he well deserves, which might do much.
The flood, flame, swine, the lion, and the snake,

Those fivefold monsters, modern authors make : The snake reigns most; snakes, Pliny says, are bred,

When the brain's perish'd in a human head.
Ye grov'lling, trodden, whipt, stript, turncoat things,
Made up of venom, volumes, stains, and stings!
Thrown from the tree of knowledge, like you,

curst

To scribble in the dust, was Snake the first.

What if the figure should in fact prove true?
It did in Elkenal:', why not in you?
Poor Elkenah, all other changes past,
For bread in Smithfield dragons hiss'd at last,
Spit streams of tire to make the butchers gape,
And found his manners suited to his shape:
Such is the fate of talents misapply'd;
So liv'd your prototype; and so he died.

Th' abandon'd manners of our writing train
May tempt mankind to think religion vain;
But in their fate, their habit, and their mien,
That gods there are is eminently seen:
Heaven stands absolv'd by vengeance on their pen,
And marks the murderers of fame from men:
Through meagre jaws they draw their venal breath,
As ghastly as their brothers in Macbeth:
Their feet through faithless leather meet the dirt,
And oftener chang'd their principles than shirt.
The transient vestment of these frugal men
Hastens to paper for our mirth again:
Too soon (O merry-melancholy fate!)
They beg in rhyme, and warble through a grate:
The man lampoon'd forgets it at the sight;
The friend through pity gives, the foe through spite;
And though full conscious of his injur'd purse,
Lintot relents, nor Curll can wish them worse.
So fare the men, who writers dare commence
Without their patent, probity and sense.

From these, their politics our quidnuncs seek, And Saturday's the learning of the week: These labouring wits, like paviers, mend our ways, With heavy, huge, repeated, flat essays;

Ram their coarse nonsense down, though ne'er so dull;

And hem at every thump upon your scull :
These stanch-bred writing hounds begin the cry,
And honest folly echoes to the lie.

O how I laugh, when I a blockhead see,
Thanking a villain for his probity!
Who stretches out a most respectful ear,
With snares for woodcocks in his holy leer:
It tickles through my soul to hear the cock's
Sincere encomium on his friend the fox,
Sole patron of his liberties and rights !
While graceless Reynard listens till he bites.
As, when the trumpet sounds, th' o'erloaded
state

Discharges all her poor and profligate ;
Crimes of all kinds dishonour'd weapons wield,
And prisons pour their filth into the field;
Thus Nature's refuse, and the dregs of inen,
Compose the black militia of the pen.

Settle, the city poet.

EPISTLE II.

FROM OXFORD.

ALL write at London; shall the rage abate
Here, where it most should shine, the Muses' seat?
Where, mortal, or immortal, as they please,
The learn'd may choose eternity or ease?
Has not a royal patron wisely strove
To woo the Muse in her Athenian grove?
Added new strings to her harmonious shell,
And given new tongues to those who spoke so well?
Let these instruct with truth's illustrious ray,
Awake the world, and scare our owls away.

Mean while, O friend! indulge me, if I give
Some needful precepts how to write, and live;
Serious should be an author's final views;
Who write for pure amusement, ne'er amuse.
An author! T is a venerable name!
How few deserve it, and what numbers claim!
Unblest with sense above their peers refin'd,
Who shall stand up, dictators to mankind?
Nay, who dare shine, if not in virtue's cause,
That sole proprietor of just applause ?

Ye restless men, who pant for letter'd praise, With whom would you consult to gain the bays?With those great authors whose fam'd works you

read?

'T is well go, then, consult the laurel'd shade,
What answer will the laurel'd shade return?
Hear it, and tremble! he commands you burn
The noblest works his envy'd genius writ,
That boast of naught more excellent than wit.
If this be true, as 't is a truth most dread,
Woe to the page which has not that to plead !
Fontaine and Chaucer, dying, wish'd unwrote
The sprightliest efforts of their wanton thought:
Sidney and Waller, brightest sons of fame,
Condemn the charm of ages to the flame;
And in one point is all true wisdom cast,
To think that early we must think at last.

Immortal wits, e'eu dead, break Nature's laws,
Injurious still to virtue's sacred cause;
And their guilt growing, as their bodies rot,
(Revers'd ambition!) pant to be forgot.

Thus ends your courted fame: does lucre then, The sacred thirst of gold betray your pen? In prose 't is blameable, in verse 't is worse, Provokes the Muse, extorts Apollo's curse; His sacred influence never should be sold; 'Tis arrant simony to sing for gold: 'Tis immortality should fire your mind; Scorn a less paymaster than all mankind.

If bribes ye seek, know this, ye writing tribe!
Who writes for virtue has the largest bribe:
All's on the party of the virtuous man;
The good will surely serve him, if they can;
The bad, when interest or ambition guide,
And 't is at once their interest and their pride:
But should both fail to take him to their care,
He boasts a greater friend, and both may spare.
Letters to man uncommon light dispense;

And what is virtue, but superior sense?
In parts and learning ye who place your pride,
Your faults are crimes, your crimes are double.

dy'd.

What is a scandal of the first renown,

But letter'd knaves, and atheists in a gown?

King George I.

'Tis harder far to please than give offence;
The least misconduct damns the brightest sense;
Each shallow pate, that cannot read your name,
Can read your life, and will be proud to blame.
Flagitious manners make impressions deep
On those that o'er a page of Milton sleep:
Nor in their dulness think to save your shame,
True, these are fools; but wise men say the same.
Wits are a despicable race of men,

If they confine their talents to the pen;
When the man shocks us, while the writer shines,
Our scorn in life, our envy in his lines.
Yet, proud of parts, with prudence some dispense,
And play the fool, because they 're men of sense.
What instances bleed recent in each thought,
Of men to ruin by their genius brought!
Against their wills what numbers ruin shun,
Purely through want of wit to be undone !
Nature has shown, by making it so rare,
That wit's a jewel which we need not wear.
Of plain sound sense life's current coin is made;
With that we drive the most substantial trade.

Prudence protects and guides us, wit betrays;
A splendid source of ill ten thousand ways;
A certain snare to miseries immense ;
A gay prerogative from common sense;
Unless strong judgment that wild thing can tame,
And break to paths of virtue and of fame.

But grant your judgment equal to the best, Sense fills your head, and genius fires your breast; Yet still forbear: your wit (consider well) 'Tis great to show, but greater to conceal; As it is great to seize the golden prize Of place or power; but greater to despise. If still you languish for an author's name, Think private merit less than public fame, And fancy not to write is not to live; Deserve, and take, the great prerogative, But ponder what it is; how dear 't will cost, To write one page which you may justly boast. Sense may be good, yet not deserve the press; Who write, an awful character profess; The world as pupil of their wisdom claim, And for their stipend an immortal fame: Nothing but what is solid or refin'd Should dare ask public audience of mankind. Severely weigh your learning and your wit: Keep down your pride by what is nobly writ: No writer, fam'd in your own way, pass o'er ; Much trust example, but reflection more: More had the antients writ, they more had taught; Which shows some work is left for modern thought. This weigh'd perfection know; and, know Toil, burn for that; but do not aim at more; Aboye, beneath it, the just limits fix; And zealously prefer four lines to six.

Write, and re-write, blot out, and write again,
And for its swiftness ne'er applaud your pen.
Leave to the jockeys that Newmarket praise,
Slow runs the Pegasus that wins the bays.
Much time for immortality to pay,

Is just and wise; for less is thrown away.
Time only can mature the labouring brain;
Time is the father, and the midwife pain:
The same good sense that makes a man excel,
Still makes him doubt he ne'er has written well.
Downright impossibilities they seek;
What man can be immortal in a week?

Excuse no fault; though beautiful, 't will harm; One fault shocks more than twenty beauties charm.

Our age demands correctness; Addison
And you this commendable hurt have done.
Now writers find, as once Achilles found,
The whole is mortal, if a part `s unsound.

He that strikes out, and strikes not out the best
Pours lustre in, and dignifies the rest :
Give e'er so little, if what's right be there,
We praise for what you burn, and what you spare:
The part you burn smells sweet before the shrine,
And is as incense to the part divine.

Nor frequent write, though you can cot well;
Men may too oft, though not too much, excel.
A few good works gain fame, more sink their price;
Mankind are fickle, and hate paying twice:
They granted you writ well: what can they more,
Unless you let them praise for giving o'er ?

Do boldly what you do ; and let your page
Smile, if it smiles, and if it rages, rage.
So faintly Lucius censures and commends,
That Lucius has no foes, except his friends.

Let satire less engage you than applause;
It shows a generous mind to wink at flaws:
Is genius yours? Be yours a glorious end,
Be your king's, country's, truth's, religion's friend;
The public glory by your own beget;

Run nations, run posterity, in debt.

And since the fam'd alone make others live,
First have that glory you presume to give.

If satire charms, strike faults, but spare the man;
'Tis dull to be as witty as you can.
Satire recoils whenever charg'd too high;
Round your own fame the fatal splinters fly.
As the soft plume gives swiftness to the dart,
Good-breeding sends the satire to the heart.

Painters and surgeons may the structure scan;
Genius and morals be with you the man:
Defaults in those alone should give offence;
Who strikes the person, pleads his innocence.
My narrow-minded satire can't extend
To Codrus' form; I'm not so much his friend:
Himself should publish that (the world agree)
Before his works, or in the pillory.

Let him be black, fair, tall, short, thin, or fat,
Dirty or clean, I find no theme in that.
Is that call'd humour? It has this pretence,
'Tis neither virtue, breeding, wit, or sense.
Unless you boast the genius of a Swift,
Beware of humour, the dull rogue's last shift.

Can others write like you? Your task give o'er,
'Tis printing what was publish'd long before.
If naught peculiar through your labours run,
They 're duplicates, and twenty are but one.
Think frequently, think close, read nature, turn
Men's manners o'er, and half your volumes burn;
To nurse with quick reflection be your strife,
Thoughts born from present objects, warm from life;
When most unsought, such inspirations rise,
Slighted by fools, and cherish'd by the wise:
Expect peculiar fame from these alone;
These make an author, these are all your own.
Life, like their Bibles, coolly men turn o'er;
Hence unexperienc'd children of threescore.
True, all men think of course, as all men dream;
And if they slightly think, 't is much the same.
Letters admit not of a half-renown;
They give you nothing, or they give a crown.
No work e'er ga'n'd true fame, or ever can,
But what did honour to the name of man.

Weighty the subject, cogent the discourse, Clear be the style, the very sound of force ;

Easy the conduct, simple the design,
Striking the moral, and the soul divine:
Let nature art, and judgment wit, exceed;
O'er learning reason reign; o'er that, your creed:
Thus virtue's seeds, at once, and laurel's grow;
Do thus, and rise a Pope, or a Despreau:
And when your genius exquisitely shines,
Live up to the full lustre of your lines:
Parts but expose those men who virtue quit ;
A fallen angel is a fallen wit;

And they plead Lucifer's detested cause,
Who for bare talents challenge our applause.
Would you restore just honours to the pen?
From able writers rise to worthy men. [strain?
"Who's this with nonsense, nonsense would re-
Who's this," they cry, "so vainly schools the vain?
Who damns our trash, with so much trash replete?
As, three ells round, huge Cheyne rails at meat?"
Shall I with Bavius then my voice exalt,
And challenge all mankind to find one fault?
With huge examens overwhelm my page,
And darken reason with dogmatic rage?
As if, one tedious volume writ in rhyme,
In prose a duller could excuse the crime?
Sure, next to writing, the most idle thing
Is gravely to harangue on what we sing.

At that tribunal stands the writing tribe,
Which nothing can intimidate or bribe,
Time is the judge; Time has nor friend nor foe;
False fame must wither, and the true will grow.
Arm'd with this truth, all critics I defy;
For if I fall, by my own pen I die;
While snarlers strive with proud but fruitless pain,
To wound immortals, or to slay the slain.

Sore prest with danger, and in awful dread Of twenty pamphlets level'd at my head, Thus have I forg'd a buckler in my brain, Of recent form, to serve me this campaign! And safely hope to quit the dreadful tield Delug'd with ink, and sleep behind my shield; Unless dire Codrus rouses to the fray In all his might, and damns me-for a day. As turns a flock of geese, and, on the green, Poke out their foolish necks in awkward spleen, (Ridiculous in rage!) to hiss, not bite, So war their quills, when sons of dulness write.

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As when the rapid Rhone, o'er swelling tides, Te grace old Ocean's court, in triumph rides, Though rich his source, he drains a thousand springs, Nor scorns the tribute each small rivulet brings.

So thou shalt, hence, absorb each feeble ray, Each dawn of meaning, in thy brighter day; Shalt like, or, where thou canst not like, excuse, Since no mean interest shall profane the Muse, No malice, wrapt in truth's disguise, offend, Nor flattery taint the freedom of the friend.

When first a generous mind surveys the great, And views the crowds that on their fortune wait; Pleas'd with the show (though little understood) He only seeks the power, to do the good; Thinks, till he tries, 't is godlike to dispose, And gratitude still springs, where bounty sows; That every grant sincere affection wins, And where our wants have end, our love begins: But those who long the paths of state have trod, Learn from the clamours of the murmuring crowd, Which cramm'd, yet craving still, their gates besiege,

'Tis easier far to give, than to oblige.

This of thy conduct seems the nicest part, The chief perfection of the statesman's art, To give to fair assent a fairer face,

Or soften a refusal into grace:

But few there are that can be truly kind,
Or know to fix their favours on the mind;
Hence, some, whene'er they would oblige, offend,
And while they make the fortune, lose the friend;
Still give, unthank'd; still squander, not bestow;
For great men want not, what to give, but how.

The race of men that follow courts, 't is true,
Think all they get, and more than all, their due;
Still ask, but ne'er consult their own deserts,
And measure by their interest, not their parts:
From this mistake so many men we see
But ill become the thing they wish'd to be;
Hence discontent, and fresh demands arise,
More power, more favour in the great man's eyes;
All Teel a want, though none the cause suspects,
But hate their patron, for their own defects;
Such none can please, but who reforms their hearts,
And, when he gives them places, gives them parts.
As these o'erprize their worth, so sure the great
May sell their favour at too dear a rate;
When merit pines, while clamour is preferr'd,
And long attachment waits among the herd;
When no distinction, where distinction 's due,
Marks from the many the superior few;
When strong cabal constrains them to be just,
And makes them give at last-because they must;
What hopes that men of real worth should prize,
What neither friendship gives, nor merit buys?
The man who justly o'er the whole presides,
His well-weigh'd choice with wise affection guides;
Knows when to stop with grace, and when ad-
vance,

Nor gives through importunity or chance;
But thinks how little gratitude is ow'd,
When favours are extorted, not bestow'd,
When, safe on shore ourselves, we see the crowd
Surround the great, importunate, and loud;
Through such a tumult, 't is no easy task
To drive the man of real worth to ask:
Surrounded thus, and giddy with the show,
Tis hard for great men, rightly to bestow;
From hence so few are skill'd, in either case,
fo ask with dignity, or give with grace,

Sometimes the great, seduc'd by love of parts, Consult our genius, and neglect our hearts; Pleas'd with the glittering sparks that genius flings, They lift us, towering on their eagle's wings, Mark out the flights by which themselves begun, And teach our dazzled eyes to bear the sun; Till we forget the hand that made us great, And grow to envy, not to emulate : To emulate, a generous warmth implies, To reach the virtues, that make great men rise; But envy wears a mean malignant face, And aims not at their virtues-but their place. Such to oblige, how vain is the pretence ! When every favour is a fresh offence, By which superior power is still imply'd, And, while it helps their fortune, hurts their pride. Slight is the hate, neglect or hardships breed; But those who hate from envy, hate indeed.

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"Since so perplex'd the choice, whom shall we
trust?"

Methinks I hear thee cry-The brave and just;
The man by no mean fears or hopes control'd,
Who serves thee from affection, not for gold.

We love the honest, and esteem the brave,
Despise the coxcomb, but detest the knave;
No show of parts the truly wise seduce,
To think that knaves can be of real use.

The man, who contradicts the public voice,
And strives to dignify a worthless choice,
Attempts a task that on that choice reflects,
And lends us light to point out new defects.
One worthless man, that gains what he pretends,
Disgusts a thousand unpretending friends:
And since no art can make a counterpass,
Or add the weight of gold to mimic brass,
When princes to bad ore their image join,
They more debase the stamp, than raise the coin.
Be thine the care, true merit to reward,
And gain the good-nor will that task be hard;
Souls form'd alike so quick by nature blend,
An honest man is more than half thy friend.

Him, no mean views, or haste to rise, shall
sway,

Thy choice to sully, or thy trust betray:
Ambition, here, shall at due distance stand;
Nor is wit dangerous in an honest hand:
Besides, if failings at the bottom lie,
We view those failings with a lover's eye;
Though small his genius, let him do his best,
Our wishes and belief supply the rest.

Let others barter servile faith for gold,
His friendship is not to be bought or sold:
Fierce opposition he, unmov'd, shail face,
Modest in favour, daring in disgrace,
To share thy adverse fate alone, pretend;
In power, a servant; out of power, a friend.
Here pour thy favours in an ample flood,
Indulge thy boundless thirst of doing good:
Nor think that good to him alone confin'd;
Such to oblige, is to oblige mankind.

If thus thy mighty master's steps thou trace, The brave to cherish, and the good to grace; Long shalt thou stand from rage and faction free, And teach us long to love the king, through thee: Or fall a victim dangerous to the foe,

And make him tremble when he strikes the blow;
While honour, gratitude, affection join
To deck thy close, and brighten thy decline;
(Illustrious doom!) the great, when thus displac'd,
With friendship guarded, and with virtue grac'd,

In awful ruin, like Rome's senate, fall,
The prey and worship of the wondering Gaul.
No doubt, to genius some reward is due,
(Excluding that, were satirizing you ;)
But yet, believe thy undesigning friend,
When truth and genius for thy choice contend,
Though both have weight when in the balance cast,
Let probity be first, and parts the last.

On these foundations if thou dar'st be great,
And check the growth of folly and deceit;
When party rage shall droop through length of days,
And calumny be ripen'd into praise,

Then future times shall to thy worth allow
That fame, which envy would call flattery now.
Thus far my zeal, though for the task unfit,
Has pointed out the rocks where others split;
By that inspir'd, though stranger to the Nine,
And negligent of any fame-but thine,
I take the friendly, but superfluous part;
You act from nature what I teach from art.

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FROM man's too curious and impatient sight,
The future, Heaven involves in thickest night.
Credit gray hairs: though freedom much we boast,
Some least perform, what they determine most.
What sudden changes our resolves betray !
To morrow is a satire on to day,
And shows its weakness. Whom shall men believe,
When constantly themselves, themselves deceive?

Long had I bid my once-lov'd Muse adieu;
You warm old age; my passion burns anew.
How sweet your verse! how great your force of mind!
What power of words! what skill in dark mankind!
Polite the conduct; generous the design;
And beauty files, and strength sustains, each line,
Thus Mars and Venus are, once more, beset;
Your wit has caught them in its golden net.

But what strikes home with most exalted grace
Is, haughty genius taught to know its place;
And, where worth shines, its humbled crest to bend,
With zeal devoted to that godlike end.
When we discern so rich a vein of sense,
Through the smooth flow of purest eloquence;
'Tis like the limpid streams of Tagus roll'd
O'er boundless wealth, o'er shining beds of gold.

But whence so finish'd, so refin'd a piece?
The tongue denies it to old Rome and Greece;
The genius bids the moderns doubt their claim,
And slowly take possession of the fame.
But I nor know, nor care, by whom 'twas writ,
Enough for me that 't is from human wit,
That sooths my pride: all glory in the pen
Which has done honour to the race of men.

But this have others done; a like applause
An ancient and a modern Horace draws'.
But they to glory by degrees arose,
Meridian lustre you at once disclose.

1 Boileau.

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