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The Resolution.
1 YES, dear Philistris, in my lov'd Retreat
2 I will the Malice of my Stars defeat:
3 I've not deserv'd my Fate, and therefore dare
4 To brave my Fortune when 'tis most severe:
5 While Innocence and Honour guard my Breast,
6 I shall in spite of my worst Foes be blest:
7 In spite of all the Rage the Furies can inspire,
8 When into mortal Breasts they breath infernal Fire,
9 With Eyes that dart malignant Horrors round,
[Page 46]10 And Voices which affright with their tremendous Sound,
11 They fiercely may the cruel Fight begin,
12 And hope by Violence the Day to win;
13 But all in vain; I'll smiling ward each Blow,
14 And where my Duty calls undaunted go:
15 Secure within, their Shock I dare sustain,
16 My Souls impassive, and can feel no Pain:
17 I've secret Joys, Delights to them unknown,
18 In Solitude I never am alone:
19 Books are the best Companions I can find,
20 At once they please, at once instruct the Mind.
21 Fam'd Rochester, who Athens's Plague has writ
22 With all the Charms of Poetry and Wit,
23 Does Honour on his sacred See bestow;
24 At once its Glory, and its Blessing too:
25 Him I with Pleasure read, each well weigh'd Line,
26 Delights my Soul, his Thoughts are all Divine.
27 With awful Fear on Stillingfleet I gaze,
28 His wondrous Knowledge and deep Sense my ravish'd Soul amaze:
29 Smooth Tillotson affords no less Delight,
30 None ever did with more Exactness write,
31 Or with more Clearness each dark Text unfold,
32 He sacred Truths intelligibly told:
33 Strong are his Reasons, and his Language fine,
34 And like his Subjects, ev'ry where Divine;
35 Much the learn'd Sarum's pompous Stile do's please,
36 His Thoughts, tho' lofty, are express'd with Ease:
37 What e'er he writes so captivates the Mind,
38 We there the Strength of pow'rful Reason find:
[Page 47]39 See human Nature to its Zenith rais'd,
40 And Virtue with a winning Sweetness prais'd:
41 So charming made, and so majestick too,
42 We're forc'd to Love, what awfully we view:
43 Thou wondrous Man! who can enough admire
44 The amazing Force of that celestial Fire,
45 Which thro' each Line do's sacred Warmth inspire?
46 To darkest Minds clear dazling Light convey,
47 Refulgent Beams of intellectual Day!
48 Th' ingenious Norris in a flowing Strain,
49 With various Scenes of Wit do's entertain;
50 Sometimes in Prose he sweetly do's invite,
51 And then in Verse takes an unbounded Flight:
52 Plato reviv'd, we in his Writings find,
53 His Sentiments are there, but more refin'd.
54 'Twould be too tedious if I all should name,
55 Who have a just, unquestion'd Right to Fame.
56 O happy Albion! in thy Clergy blest,
57 In Sons that are of ev'ry Grace possest!
58 May they increase, and like ascending Light
59 Chase hence those Spectres that are pleas'd with Night,
60 Nor can endure a Glory so divinely bright:
61 Those restless Troublers of the Churches Peace;
62 May their Attacks, and their Reproaches cease;
63 While she supported by Almighty Love,
64 Securely on the wat'ry Deep do's move;
65 In sacred Pomp on swelling Surges rise,
66 And all the Monsters of the Main despise.
67 Philosophers next these, are my Delight;
68 O let me learn from them to think aright:
[Page 48]69 Contending Passions timely to restrain,
70 And o'er my self a happy Conquest gain:
71 To stand unalter'd at the Turns of Fate,
72 And undejected in the worst Estate.
73 With Secret Pleasure I the Lives survey
74 Of those great Men who Virtue did obey,
75 And went unweary'd on in her steep painful Way;
76 Their bright Examples fortifie my Mind,
77 And I within both Strength and Calmness find:
78 When I am wrong'd, or treated with Neglect,
79 I on the patient Socrates reflect;
80 That virtuous Man, who was severely try'd,
81 Who injur'd liv'd, and much more injur'd dy'd:
82 Methinks I see him laugh'd at on the Stage,
83 And made a Victim to the Poets Rage;
84 Expos'd, and ridicul'd, while he sits by,
85 And calmly bears their spiteful Calumny:
86 In him none coul'd the least Emotion find,
87 He bore Reproaches with a constant Mind,
88 And bravely met that Fate, which Fate for him design'd;
89 That Fate, which he persuaded was to shun;
90 But he resolv'd to keep the Glory he had won:
91 His Fame, to him than Life, was much more dear,
92 And Death was what he ne'er had learnt to fear:
93 Brave to the last, and to his Virtue true,
94 Without Concern he bid his Friends adieu,
95 And with a free, untroubl'd, cheerful Air,
96 Did for another, better State prepare,
97 And smiling drank the welcome Cure of all his Care:
98 That happy Draught, that Balm for all his Grief,
99 His best, his last, his only sure Relief.
100 O who wou'd live, that with such ease could go
101 From this vile World, this dismal Scene of Woe,
102 Where most are false, and no Compassion show,
103 Where our Misfortunes but a Jest are made,
104 Where by pretended Friends we're most betray'd:
105 Where Men are to their Int'rest wholly ty'd,
106 Slaves to their glitt'ring Gold, and to their Pride,
107 And where Ambition, and Self-love as sovereign Lords preside:
108 Where Kindness only do's to Words extend,
109 And few are truly that which they pretend,
110 And where the greatest Prodigy's a Friend.
111 Thrice happy Times when Riches were despis'd,
112 And Men for innate Worth were only priz'd:
113 When none to Titles their respect did pay,
114 Nor were to Bribes a mercenary Prey:
115 When all to rural Cares their Thoughts did bend,
116 And on their harmless Flocks with Peace attend;
117 When underneath some cool delightful Shade,
118 They to their Nymphs their artless Courtship made,
119 And were with kindest Vows, and unfeign'd Truth repaid:
120 When Constancy their highest Boast became,
121 And Friend was held the most endearing Name;
122 When nothing ill was harbour'd in the Mind,
123 But all were pious, gen'rous, just and kind.
124 But that blest Age, alas! was quickly past,
125 What's eminently good can never last:
126 Short was the peaceful Saturn's Golden Reign:
127 But oh! this Iron Age do's still remain.
128 Betimes the Vicious their Insults began,
129 And fatal was Integrity to Man:
130 The virtuous still to Hardships were inur'd,
131 And still the Drudgeries of Fate indur'd:
132 Saw Fools admir'd, and wealthy Fops carest,
133 And Rebels with Imperial Purple drest:
134 Knaves made the Props of an unthinking State,
135 When Truth and Justice shou'd support the Weight:
136 Ill Men ador'd, and prais'd above the Skies,
137 While at their Feet neglected Merit lies,
138 And Regulus amidst his Tortures dies:
139 An Aristides from his Athens sent,
140 From his ungrateful Town to Banishment:
141 A Cato bleeding in the noblest Cause,
142 A Victim to his Honour, and the Laws:
143 He reads with Pleasure of th' immortal State,
144 And then with hast anticipates his Fate;
145 With the same Courage he for Rome had fought,
146 He for his Soul a welcom Passage sought.
147 A Petrus strugling with a Tyrant's Rage,
148 A suff'ring Arria, Wonder of her Age!
149 The best of Wives, the kindest, truest Friend;
150 Her Spouse in all his Troubles did attend:
151 His Grief was hers, and so was all his Care;
152 Well pleas'd she was with him the worst of Ills to share.
153 When he was doom'd by his own Hand to die,
154 She beg'd him with the Sentence to comply;
155 Told him a wretched Life deserv'd no Care,
156 And that a Roman never ought to fear:
[Page 51]157 Bid him remember with what noble Pride
158 The valiant Curtius, and the Decii dy'd;
159 And how th' immortal Brutus Death's griefly Form defy'd:
160 But when she saw her Reasons could not move,
161 She gave a vast, a wondrous Proof of Love:
162 With hast she snatch'd his Poniard from his Side,
163 And with her dearest Blood the fatal Weapon dy'd;
164 Then drawing it undaunted from her Breast,
165 And with a Look that no Concern exprest,
166 She smiling gave it to his trembling Hand,
167 And said, O Petus, thus, thy Fate command:
168 Thus, Cæsar's Malice, and thy Stars defie;
169 Believe me, 'tis not difficult to die.
170 She said no more; he sighing clos'd her Eyes,
171 And taught by her, with conscious Blushes dies:
172 Asham'd to think for such a noble Deed
173 He shou'd th' Example of a Woman need.
174 An Epictetus in a Nero's Court,
175 The best of Men, a Slave, and Fortune's Sport.
176 A Belisarius, blind, despis'd, and poor,
177 Seeking precarious Alms from Door, to Door;
178 And meanly striving to prolong his Breath,
179 To save a Life more to be fear'd, than Death:
180 While Earth-born Monsters, a degen'rous Race,
181 Rise from their Slime, and fill the heav'nly Space;
182 Where, for a while, like Meteors they amaze,
183 And fright the World with their portentous Blaze;
184 Till having wasted all their Stock of Light,
185 They fall unpity'd from their tow'ring Hight,
186 And lie despis'd in the dark Shades of Night.
187 Thus Hist'ry Shews the World in its rude Infant State,
188 And does the Progress of Mankind relate;
189 By what slow Steps they first to Greatness rose;
190 Does all their Arts, their Policies disclose:
191 There, I behold th' Assyrian Empire rise,
192 And Babel's lofty Tow'rs insult the Skies:
193 See mighty Cyrus all their Hopes defeat,
194 And place himself in the Imperial Seat:
195 From whence I see the great Darius fall,
196 And the Pellean Youth possest of all:
197 Him, full of Glory, full of God-like Fire
198 I see amidst adoring Crouds expire:
199 Young Ammon all his boasted Conquests quit,
200 And early to the Laws of Fate submit:
201 He, whose Ambition towr'd above the Skies,
202 Now with a Spot of Earth scarce cover'd lies;
203 And in a dark, a narrow, silent Grave,
204 Sleeps undistinguish'd from his meanest Slave.
205 I next observe the Western Empire rise,
206 The Roman Eagles wanton in the Skies:
207 Those Birds of Jove clap their extended Wings,
208 While with the clattering Sound the wide Expansum rings:
209 See Royal Shepherds an Usurper chase,
210 And on his Throne their injur'd Grandsire place;
211 With happy Omens the Foundations lay
212 Of that great City which the World must sway:
213 See Rome's rash Builder, the Derider kill,
214 And a dear Brother's Blood relentless spill.
215 O what is Man, if by his Passion led!
216 Lions and Tigers with less cause we dread:
217 They much the gentler, much the kinder prove,
218 Whom nothing can against their Species move:
219 But Men each other's Ruin still design,
220 They break thro' all the Ties, the Laws Divine:
221 Nor Blood, nor Friendship, can their Rage restrain,
222 Intreaties all are lost, and Tears are shed in vain:
223 Slaves to their Will, they ev'ry Vice obey,
224 And on their Actions no Restriction lay.
225 This fatal Truth the sad Lucretia found;
226 Methinks in Tears I see her almost drown'd:
227 Confus'd she sits among her grieving Friends,
228 While each to her distressful Tale attends:
229 Trembling and Pale, with Sighs, and downcast Eyes,
230 The moving Rhetorick of her Sorrow tries:
231 And then by her own Hand with wondrous Courage dies.
232 Pride of thy Sex! thy Glory still shall live,
233 To thee we will our loudest Plaudits give:
234 My Muse with Joy shall celebrate thy Fame,
235 And make the Groves resound with thy immortal Name,
236 Th' amaz'd Beholders view the breathless Fair,
237 And for a just a quick Revenge prepare:
238 The proud Tarquinius with his guilty Race
239 They from his undeserv'd Dominions chase:
240 Govern'd by Consuls then, with Freedom blest,
241 And of the noblest Parts of Earth possest,
242 Rome long enjoy'd the Glories she had won;
243 But was inthrall'd at length by her victorious Son,
[Page 54]244 To his superior Fortune she gave way,
245 But did not long his Tyranny obey:
246 The Roman Soul exerts it self once more,
247 T'assert lost Rights, and Liberty restore;
248 The mighty Cæsar to their Rage did yield,
249 Nor could the Goddess her lov'd Off-spring shield.
250 See, full of Wounds, the Hero gasping lies,
251 And fiercely rolling his Majestick Eyes,
252 Seems to call Vengeance from his Kindred Skies.
253 How vain is Greatness, and how frail is Pow'r!
254 Those who above their Fellow Mortals tow'r,
255 Who with a Word can save, or with a Word destroy,
256 Can't to themselves insure one Moment's Joy:
257 But soon may tumble from their slippery State,
258 And feel the Pressures of an adverse Fate.
259 Sure for our selves if we our Terms could make,
260 We should not Life on such Conditions take;
261 Life, which subjects us to Ten thousand Ills,
262 And ev'ry Minute with new Trouble fills:
263 By which to Fortune we're still Captives made,
264 And to the worst of Tyrannies betray'd;
265 Captives to her, who makes Mankind her Sport,
266 Who slights the best, and does the basest court;
267 Who low with Earth the mighty Pompeys lays,
268 And from the Dust does Aniello's raise.
269 When such Reflections, such sad Thoughts as these
270 On my dejected Soul begin to seize,
271 To pleasant Studies I my self apply,
272 And feast upon the Sweets of Poetry;
[Page 55]273 Those luscious Banquets which the Mind invite,
274 Where all is to be found that can delight.
275 Sometimes in Homer I the Grecians view,
276 See, what the King, and injur'd Husband do;
277 See, tow'ring Ilium compass'd round with Foes,
278 And for her sake her Sons their Lives expose;
279 Her valiant Sons, who prodigal of Blood,
280 Long in Defence of their lov'd Country stood:
281 See, from their Seats superior Pow'rs descend,
282 And on the Phrygians and the Greeks attend,
283 And with indecent warmth among themselves contend.
284 View fierce Achilles full of Grief and Rage,
285 Victorious Hector with redoubl'd Strength engage:
286 Revenge to ev'ry Blow new Force does give;
287 The Hopes of Ilium must no longer live:
288 Fate signs his Doom; the Godlike Hero falls,
289 And thrice his Body's drag'd around the Trojan Walls:
290 The Cyprian Goddess mourns her Favourite slain,
291 And loud Laments fill all the Idalian Plain.
292 The wise Ulysses does my Wonder raise,
293 Who can enough his prudent Conduct praise?
294 With his ill Fortune he did long contest,
295 And was not with the sight of his lov'd Princess blest:
296 The Royal Mourner for his Absence wept,
297 And from her Heart intruding Princes kept;
298 In vain they sigh'd, in vain Addresses made,
299 They cou'd not by their utmost Arts persuade:
300 To her first Vows she still did constant prove,
301 Doubly secur'd by Honour, and by Love.
302 The Prince of Lyricks, full of heav'nly Fire,
303 Well pleas'd I read, and as I read, admire:
304 Of Gods and Heroes, and of God-like Kings,
305 He with unequal'd Strength, and Sweetness sings:
306 Sometimes his Muse flies near, and keeps in Sight,
307 Then on a sudden takes a towring Flight,
308 And soars as high as the bright Realms of Light.
309 The help of mean and servile Art disdains,
310 While in each charming Line luxuriant Nature reigns:
311 His pregnant Fancy from its Boundless Store,
312 Selects the richest, and the noblest Oar,
313 Which his unerring Judgment so refines,
314 That thro' the whole a pleasing Lustre shines;
315 Virtue's the darling Subject of his Lays,
316 In ev'ry Ode he Piety displays,
317 And to the Gods due Veneration pays.
318 Great was the Pow'r of his immortal Song,
319 That could his Fame in ancient Greece prolong:
320 Twice save his House, when Thebes was made a Prey
321 Untouch'd that stood, while Thebes in Ashes lay.
322 The Force of Numbers warlike Sparta knew,
323 For her what Wonders did Tyrtæus do!
324 He sung the Glories which on Fame attend;
325 And Honour gain'd by those who shall the State defend:
326 Who full of Courage, full of Heat Divine,
327 No Hazards for their Gods, and Laws, decline;
328 Who fear not Death, when the Reward is Praise,
329 That blest Exchange for all their coming Days:
[Page 57]330 The listning Soldiers with fresh Ardor fir'd;
331 As if they were by Mars himself inspir'd,
332 With furious Transports to the Field repair'd,
333 And met those Dangers, which before they fear'd:
334 Nothing Messene from their Rage could shield,
335 She to her former Lords was forc'd to yield:
336 She who to Martial Pow'r would not submit,
337 Was made a Prey to all-commanding Wit.
338 Theocritus in soft harmonious Strains,
339 Describes the Joys of the Sicilian Swains,
340 When with their Flocks they grace the flow'ry Plains,
341 And on their Pipes to listning Beauties play,
342 Who with their kind Regards the lov'd Musicians pay:
343 He, Nature in her native Plainness drew,
344 He, who the Springs of tender'st Passions knew,
345 Did Love in all its Infant Graces shew;
346 Love, unacquainted with deceitful Arts,
347 And only aiming at Exchange of Hearts.
348 Lucretius with his Philosophick Strains,
349 My Mind at once delights, and entertains:
350 Thro' Paths untrod, I see him fearless go;
351 His Steps I tread, with eager hast to know:
352 With him explore the boundless Realms of Chance,
353 And see the little busie Atoms dance:
354 See, how without Direction they combine,
355 And form a Universe without Design,
356 While careless Deities supremely blest,
357 Enjoy the Pleasures of eternal Rest,
358 Resolv'd that nothing here their Quiet shall molest.
[Page 58]359 Strange that a Man of such a Strength of Thought,
360 Could think a World was to Perfection brought
361 Without Assistance from the Pow'rs above,
362 From the blest Source of Wisdom, and of Love!
363 All frightful Thoughts he from my Soul does chase,
364 And in their room glad, bright Ideas place:
365 Tells me that Happiness in Virtue lies,
366 And bids me Death, that dreaded Ill, despise:
367 That Phantom, which if we but judg'd aright,
368 Would never once disturb, nor once affright;
369 The shocking Prospect of a future State,
370 Does in our Souls an anxious Fear create;
371 That unknown Somewhere which we must explore,
372 That strange, that distant, undiscover'd Shore,
373 Where we must land, makes us the Passage dread:
374 But were we by inlightned Reason led,
375 Were false Opinions banish'd from the Mind,
376 And we to the strict Search of Truth inclin'd,
377 We sure shou'd meet it with as much Delight
378 As the cool Pleasures of a silent Night,
379 And to our Graves with Cheerfulness should run,
380 Pleas'd that our tedious Task of Life were done.
381 Virgil with sacred Raptures fills my Mind,
382 In him I unexhausted Treasures find:
383 While he my ravish'd Soul does entertain,
384 Malice and Rage employ their Shafts in vain:
385 Easie and pleas'd, by him I'm led along,
386 And hear the wise Silenus's charming Song:
387 Among his Nymphs and Swains with Pleasure live,
388 And to their Musick glad Attention give:
389 Then hear his Shepherds for some Prize contend,
390 And see his Husbandmen their much lov'd Toil attend:
[Page 59]391 Next with him to the burning Ilium go,
392 Where he displays Ten thousand Scenes of Woe:
393 Amidst the Flames the pious Prince I View,
394 Fearless, unmov'd, his great Designs pursue:
395 Like great Alcides he with Toil and Pain,
396 To th' utmost Height of Glory did attain,
397 And unrelenting Juno's Hate sustain;
398 A due Reward at length his Virtue found,
399 And he with Glory and with Love was crown'd.
400 Horace is full of Wit, and full of Art,
401 My Mind he pleases, and inflames my Heart,
402 And fills my Breast with his Poetick Fire:
403 O that he cou'd his wondrous Heat inspire:
404 But mine's a pale, a languid, feeble Flame,
405 Wholly unworthy such a Poet's Name:
406 My humble Muse her Eyes can only raise,
407 Pleas'd that she has the Liberty to her Gaze,
408 And Leave to offer up the Tribute of her Praise.
409 When by soft moving Ovid I am told,
410 Of those strange Changes which were wrought of old,
411 When Gods in Brutal Shapes did Mortals court,
412 And unbecoming Actions made their Sport,
413 When helpless Wretches fled from impious Pow'rs,
414 And hid themselves in Birds, Beasts, Trees, and Flow'rs:
415 When none from Outrage cou'd securely dwell,
416 But felt the Rage of Heav'n, of Earth, and Hell:
417 Methinks, I see those Passions well exprest,
418 Which play the Tyrant in the Mortal Breast:
419 They to Ten thousand Miseries expose,
420 And are our only, and our deadly Foes:
[Page 60]421 They like the Vultur on our Entrails prey,
422 And in our Path the Golden Apple lay,
423 But from us snatch our dear Euridices away.
424 Up the steep Hill the pond'rous Torment roll,
425 And cheat with empty Shews the famish'd Soul:
426 Those who are still submitted to their Sway,
427 Must in the gloomy Realms of Pluto stay,
428 And never more re-visit cheerful Day:
429 But those who're from their earthly Dross calcin'd,
430 Who tast the Pleasures of a virtuous Mind,
431 Who'd rather chuse to die, than once their Conscience stain,
432 Who midst Temptations Innocence retain,
433 And o'er themselves an undisputed Empire gain:
434 In th' Elysian Fields shall be for ever blest,
435 And with the Happy, there enjoy the Sweets of Rest.
436 How well does he express unhappy Love!
437 Each Page does melt, and ev'ry Line does move.
438 The fair Oenone does so well complain,
439 That I can't chuse but blame her faithless Swain:
440 Good Hypermnestra much laments her Fate,
441 Forsaken Phyllis her deplor'd Estate;
442 Her absent Lord sad Laodamia mourns,
443 And Sappho for her perjur'd Phaon burns:
444 O wondrous Woman! Prodigy of Wit!
445 Why didst thou Man to thy fond Heart admit?
446 Man, treacherous Man, who still a Riddle proves,
447 And by the Dictates of his Fancy moves,
448 Whose Looks are Snares, and ev'ry Word a Bait,
449 And who's compos'd of nothing but Deceit?
450 What Pity 'twas thou shouldst to Love give way,
451 To Love, to vicious Love, become a Prey,
[Page 61]452 And by a guilty, inauspicious Flame,
453 Eclipse the Splendor of so bright a Name.
454 On Juvenal I look with great Delight,
455 Both he and Persius with much Keeness write,
456 They gravely teach, as well as sharply bite.
457 Think not to th' ancient Bards I am alone confin'd,
458 They please, but never shall ingross my Mind;
459 In modern Writers I can Beauties find.
460 Phœbus has been propitious to this Isle,
461 And on our Poets still is pleas'd to Smile.
462 Milton was warm'd by his enliv'ning Fire,
463 Who Denham, Waller, Cowley did inspire,
464 Roscommon too, whom the learn'd World admire:
465 The tuneful Dryden felt his hottest Rays,
466 And long with Honour wore his freshest Bays:
467 The Arts, the Muses, and the Graces try
468 To raise his Name, and lift him to the Skie,
469 And bless him with a Fame that ne'er shall die:
470 But he is gone! extinguish'd is that Light,
471 Which with its Lustre so long charm'd our Sight:
472 Yet at his Loss we dare not once repine,
473 While we see Dorset with such Glory shine,
474 While we see Normanby adorn the Skies,
475 And Halifax with dazling Brightness rise:
476 That fam'd Triumvirate of Wit and Sense,
477 Who Laws to the whole Under-world dispence;
478 Whose Praise for me t' attempt, would be a Fau't,
479 So much are they beyond the highest flight of Thought.
480 Granville the Charms of Virtue does rehearse,
481 Bright it appears in his majestick Verse:
482 Forsaken Honesty's his chief Delight,
483 To That, and Honour, he does all invite:
484 Commends that Peace, that Quiet of the Mind,
485 Which those enjoy, who to themselves confin'd
486 Forsake the noisie World, and leave its Cares behind,
487 Who live in Shades, where true Contentment's found,
488 And fly from Courts, as from unhallow'd Ground.
489 How wondrous good has he Chryseis made!
490 How full of Charms is that fair Captive Maid!
491 What noble Proofs of Kindness does she give!
492 For her Atrides she can wretched live!
493 Whom she so much above her self does prize,
494 That when his Safety in the Balance lies,
495 From his lov'd Sight, and all her Bliss she flies;
496 And rather than his Happiness destroy,
497 Will take an everlasting leave of Joy.
498 Such an Affection, such a gen'rous Flame,
499 Sure, the severest Censor cannot blame.
500 As firm, as lasting, would our Friendships prove,
501 If, as we ought, we knew but how to love:
502 Did Honour chuse, and Truth unite our Hearts,
503 If we were free from sordid wheedling Arts,
504 From Av'rice, Pride, and Narrowness of Mind,
505 We shou'd to others, as our selves be kind,
506 And all the Pleasures of a virtuous Union find.
507 The lov'd Commerce would more and more endear,
508 We with our Friends in all Concerns should share.
509 With them rejoice, and grieve, and hope, and fear;
[Page 63]510 And by Degrees to such an Ardor rise,
511 That we for them should Life it self despise,
512 And much above our own, their Satisfaction prize.
513 Than Dennis none with greater Judgment writes,
514 Fancy with Vigor in his Stile unites.
515 A Place with these, Vanbrook may justly claim,
516 His Thoughts are full of Wit, and full of Flame:
517 Instructing Sharpness runs thro' ev'ry Page;
518 His Æsop's the Thersites of our Age.
519 Than Garth none can with greater Smoothness write,
520 Just is his Stile, his Satyr is Polite:
521 Not rude like those which in the Woods are bred,
522 Each piercing Truth's with courtly Softness said:
523 But when he glorious Actions does rehearse,
524 And makes the Great the Subject of his Verse,
525 He soars aloft above the Reach of Thought,
526 And all's with wondrous Art, with wondrous Fancy wrought.
527 Like him, methinks, I mighty Heroes view;
528 See fam'd Camillus flying Gauls pursue,
529 The prudent Fabius Rome from Danger shield,
530 And Carthage to victorious Scipio yield:
531 The great Nassaw unwith'ring Lawrels gain,
532 Unmov'd the Shock of Gallick Force sustain,
533 Fierce as the God of War on the Phlegræan Plain:
534 But he's no more: The Fair ascends Throne,
535 And we with Joy the lov'd Minerva own;
536 Pleas'd that we Heav'ns peculiar Care are grown.
537 Congreve to ev'ry Theme does Beauty give,
538 His fair Almeria will for ever live.
539 Homer looks great in his rich English Dress;
540 So well he Priam's Sorrow does express,
541 That I with him for valiant Hector grieve;
542 His Suff'rings on my Mind a deep Impression leave.
543 With sad Andromache a part I bear,
544 With her in all her Lamentations share:
545 With Hecuba bewail a darling Son,
546 Who for his Country glorious Things had done:
547 His Country, which its Prop thus snatch'd away,
548 She knew must to the Græcians fall a Prey;
549 And she with all her House must foreign Lords obey.
550 Rowe to the Skies does his great Hero raise;
551 His Tamerlane deserves immortal Praise:
552 No Pen but his cou'd ev'ry Feature trace,
553 No Pen but his describe each Martial Grace:
554 With noble Ardor to the War he goes,
555 And all around commanding Glances throws,
556 And fearless views Ten thousand thousand Foes:
557 Unwilling to destroy, he mourns their Fate,
558 Th' ensuing Slaughter does his Thirst of Fame abate:
559 When he from Bajazet has won the Field,
560 And all to his superior Virtue yield,
561 He's still the same; still humble, just, and kind;
562 In him we still the God-like Scythian find,
563 The same compassionate, forgiving, gen'rous Mind.
564 Who for Arpasia can from Tears abstain?
565 Or hear unmov'd, her much wrong'd Prince complain?
566 With melting Softness they their Woes express;
567 Their Sorrows charm in his attracting Dress.
568 Ovid himself could not with greater Art
569 Describe the tender Motions of the Heart,
570 The Grief they feel, who must for ever part.
571 Who beauteous Selima expos'd can see
572 To her inhuman Father's Cruelty
573 Without Concern? And when in such Distress
574 Not her Axalla, her Deliv'rer bless?
575 May he go on, still thus adorn the Stage,
576 Still show such bright Examples to our Age,
577 Till he to us lost Virtue shall restore,
578 And we see Honour flourish here once more:
579 Till Justice all her ancient Rights regains,
580 And in her once lov'd Albion unmolested reigns.
581 When these have for some time employ'd my Mind,
582 In other Authors I fresh Pleasures find,
583 And meet with various Scenes of Thoughts behind:
584 Lost Montezuma in Accosta view,
585 See what for Gold the barb'rous Spaniards do:
586 See the good Inca's bend beneath their Fate,
587 And dying mourn the downfal of their State:
588 Then with him lofty Andes Height ascend;
589 See the fam'd Amazon her Streams extend,
590 And to the Sea her wide-stretch'd Current bend.
591 Then view in others Asiatick Pride,
592 See a few Men the spacious East divide:
593 Whose hard Commands poor Wretches must obey,
594 Doom'd to the Mischiefs of Tyrannick Sway:
595 To Toil condemn'd, they pass their Time in Pain,
596 But dare not of their rig'rous Fate complain:
597 Nothing is theirs, their Lives are not their own,
598 To them no Pity, no Regard is shown:
599 Like Beasts they're us'd, and little more they know,
600 And ev'ry Place like them, does Signs of Slavery show:
601 Their Plains once fruitful, now neglected lie;
602 And glorious Structures which once brav'd the Skie,
603 Can hardly now their awful Relicks Show,
604 We scarce can their majestick Ruins know,
605 While China govern'd by the wisest Rules,
606 And all her Nobles bred in great Confutius Schools,
607 Shews me what Art and Industry can do:
608 Pleas'd I their Morals and Politeness view:
609 Delighted see how happy they remain,
610 Who still the Love of Learning entertain,
611 And where, pure uncorrupted Reason still does Reign.
612 Then look on their Reverse, whom all deride,
613 Who seem design'd to pull down human Pride:
614 Those rude inhabitants of Africk's Shore,
615 Who seek no future Good, no God adore:
616 Whose Ornaments are nauseous to the Sight,
617 And who seem made with a Design to fright:
618 From such loath'd Objects I divert my Eyes,
619 And pity those I did at first despise,
620 Why, O ye Heav'nly Pow'rs, I sighing say,
621 Are Souls condemn'd to such vile Loads of Clay,
622 To Bodies which their Faculties confine,
623 Thro' which not one celestial Ray can shine?
624 We shou'd, alas! as despicable prove,
625 Were we not made the Care of unexhausted Love:
626 To That the diff'rence we must still assign,
627 And ev'ry proud aspiring Thought decline:
628 When we by Flatt'rers are rais'd too high,
629 And Man, vain Man, beyond his Sphere does fly,
630 Narcissus-like on's own Perfections gaze,
631 He ought to turn his Vanity to Praise,
632 And study to be grateful all his Days.
633 While thus employ'd, I no Misfortunes fear,
634 And can unmov'd the greatest Troubles bear:
635 Quiet, and pleas'd, on my own Stock I live,
636 And to my self Content, and Riches give.
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Chudleigh, Mary Lee, 1656-1710. Poems on several occasions. Together with the Song of the three children paraphras'd. By the Lady Chudleigh. London: Printed by W.B. for Bernard Lintott at the Middle Temple Gate in Fleetstreet, 1703, pp. 45-67. [16],125,[17],73,[1]p.; 8⁰. (ESTC T97275) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Bodleian Library [(OC) 280 j.452].)
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Other works by Lady Mary Chudleigh
- The Choice. A Dialogue between Emilia and Marissa. ()
- A Dialogue between Alexis and Astrea. ()
- A Dialogue between Virgil and Mævius. ()
- The Elevation. ()
- The Fifteenth Psalm Paraphras'd. ()
- FRIENDSHIP. ()
- The Happy Man. ()
- ICARUS. ()
- The Inquiry. A Dialogue between Cleanthe and Marissa. ()
- The Observation. ()
- The Offering. ()
- On the Death of his Highness the Duke of Glocester. ()
- On the Death of my dear Daughter Eliza Maria Chudleigh: A Dialogue between Lucinda and Marissa. ()
- On the Death of my Honoured Mother Mrs. Lee: A Dialogue between Lucinda and Marissa. ()
- On the Vanities of this Life: A Pindarick Ode. ()
- One of Lucian's Dialogues of the Dead Paraphras'd. ()
- A Pindarick Ode. ()
- The Resolve. ()
- Solitude. ()
- THE SONG OF THE Three Children PARAPHRAS'D. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. To Lerinda. ()
- To Almystrea. ()
- To Clorissa. ()
- To Eugenia. ()
- To Mr. Dryden, on his excellent Translation of Virgil. ()
- To the Ladies. ()
- To the Learn'd and Ingenious Dr. Musgrave of Exeter. ()
- To the QUEEN's most Excellent MAJESTY. ()
- To the QUEEN's most Excellent MAJESTY. ()
- The Wish. ()