[Page [153]]

ON READING LADY MARY MONTAGUE AND MRS. ROWE'S LETTERS.

1 AS Venus by night, so MONTAGUE bright
2 Long in the gay circle did shine:
3 She tun'd well the lyre, mankind did admire;
4 They prais'd, and they call'd her divine.
5 This pride of the times, in far distant climes,
6 Stood high in the temple of Fame:
7 Britannia's shore, then ceas'd to adore,
8 A greater the tribute did claim.
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9 To sue for the prize, fam'd ROWE did arise,
10 More bright than Apollo was she:
11 Superior rays obtain'd now the bays,
12 And MONTAGUE bended the knee.
13 O excellent ROWE, much Britain does owe
14 To what you've ingen'ously penn'd:
15 Of virtue and wit, the model you've hit;
16 Who reads must you ever commend.
17 Would ladies pursue, the paths trod by you,
18 And jointly to learning aspire,
19 The men soon would yield unto them the field,
20 And critics in silence admire.

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Title (in Source Edition): ON READING LADY MARY MONTAGUE AND MRS. ROWE'S LETTERS.
Themes:
Genres: occasional poem

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Little, Janet, 1759-1813. The Poetical Works of Janet Little, the Scotch Milkmaid. Air: Printed by John & Peter Wilson, 1792, pp. [153]-154.  (ESTC T126549) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Library of the University of California, Los Angeles.)

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Typography, spelling, capitalization, and punctuation have been cautiously modernized. The source of the text is given and all significant editorial interventions have been recorded in textual notes. This ECPA text has been edited to conform to the recommendations found in Level 5 of the Best Practices for TEI in Libraries version 4.0.0.

Other works by Janet Little (later Richmond)