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Who born on Earth, yet leaves his native Glades,
| 0
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And to his own prefers the watery Meads;
| 3
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Oft have I strove to burst the yielding Planks,
| 0
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And force the leaky Ship on sandy Banks:
| 0
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What happy Chance has pleased the smiling Boy?
| 0
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The Nymph he loves is sure no longer coy.
| 1
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With fiercest Rage I'd seize the trembling Fair;
| 0
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Neither her Anger nor her Tears should move,
| 3
|
My Blood's on fire, and I am full of Love.
| 1
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My Head's so wondrous light, I scarcely find
| 0
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Whether I move on Waves or dance on Wind.
| 2
|
So altered, Triton! whence proceeds this Change,
| 0
|
So unexpected, sudden, and so strange?
| 1
|
A settled melancholy Gloom, but now
| 0
|
Seemed, like a Storm, to hang upon your Brow;
| 0
|
No Herb was found to cure the fond Disease.
| 1
|
If I can use my Tongue, I'll tell thee, Love,
| 1
|
What does my Soul to sudden Transports move:
| 0
|
Meeting the scattered Ruins of a Wreck,
| 3
|
As shivered Masts, Planks, and a broken Deck,
| 2
|
Amid the rest a floating Cask I found
| 0
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Stopped up with artful Care, and strongly bound,
| 0
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Curious to know what was within contained,
| 2
|
With cautious Fear I searched; my Fingers stained
| 0
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Came forth all moistened with a juicy Red;
| 2
|
But o! the Gods never on such Nectar fed.
| 6
|
Pleased with the heavenly Taste, and spicy Smell,
| 2
|
I quaffed full Bowls in a capacious Shell.
| 2
|
You Gods! if earthy Men thus live, and drink,
| 1
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Give me the Land, the Sea's a worthless Sink.
| 0
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The precious Draughts my fainting Spirits cheer;
| 0
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I thus inspired no mortal Mer-man fear.
| 4
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I rule the boundless Seas, and now I reign
| 0
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Sole Lord, and mighty Monarch of the Main.
| 2
|
This Oil has so inflamed my secret Fire,
| 1
|
I burn impatient with the fierce Desire.
| 1
|
No Nymph, or old, or ugly, now I scorn;
| 1
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Which feeds the happy Youth with fancied Bliss?
| 0
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I long to taste the Juice that thus inspires
| 0
|
AH Thou! whom Nature and thy Stars designed,
| 1
|
At once the Joy and Envy of Mankind,
| 2
|
To thy loved Memory this Sigh I send;
| 3
|
To thee a Stranger, to thy Lines a Friend:
| 2
|
How blessed the Muse could she like thine aspire,
| 2
|
So smooth her Accent, and sublime her Fire;
| 2
|
With bright Description make the Bosom glow,
| 0
|
Charm like thy Sense, and like thy Numbers flow:
| 0
|
OH teach my Soul to reach the Seats divine,
| 1
|
And praise her Maker in a Strain like thine.
| 0
|
You careless Ones, who never thought before,
| 0
|
Read this grand Verse, then tremble and adore:
| 4
|
Let stern Enthusiasts here be taught to know,
| 1
|
It's from the Heart true Piety must flow:
| 3
|
Here Hope, Content, and smiling Mercy shine;
| 0
|
And breathe celestial through the speaking Line:
| 1
|
From the still Mind its guilty Passions roll,
| 2
|
Let angry Zealots quarrel for a Name,
| 2
|
The good, the just, the virtuous are the same:
| 1
|
Grace to no Sect, nor Virtue is confined;
| 4
|
They blend with all, and spread amongst the kind;
| 0
|
And the pure Flame that warms the pious Breast:
| 2
|
Those cannot merit who condemn the rest.
| 0
|
To the dark Nations when Religion came,
| 2
|
All dressed in Smiles; they saw the heavenly Dame,
| 2
|
Till some stern Teachers of their Office proud,
| 2
|
And veiled her Beauties in the mask of Rage:
| 0
|
Black Cruelty with fierce and flaming Eyes;
| 2
|
And Persecution wore the Robe of Zeal:
| 0
|
Deluded Faith espoused the stronger Side,
| 0
|
And conquered Justice gave her Sword to Pride.
| 0
|
This saw the surly discontented Mind,
| 0
|
By Nature haughty and to Vice inclined:
| 1
|
And thence concluded all their Systems vain,
| 0
|
The Cant of Schools and Frenzy of the Brain:
| 1
|
From hence the Sect of Libertines arose,
| 0
|
Who scorn what Reason or the Priests impose:
| 1
|
Who give to Chance the World's that round us roll,
| 0
|
But thou whose Name immortal as thy Rhymes
| 2
|
Shall live and brighten through succeeding Times:
| 1
|
Whose Lines can Wit and Virtue both inspire,
| 0
|
Whom future Ages shall like me admire
| 1
|
Teach me between the two Extremes to glide,
| 2
|
Not brave the Stream nor swim with every Tide:
| 0
|
But more with Charity than Zeal possessed,
| 1
|
Keep my own Faith, yet not condemn the rest.
| 0
|
OUR Scottish dames for virtue still be famed;
| 0
|
With Trojan, or with Roman matrons named.
| 1
|
Still to despise ' -- the man who can betray;
| 3
|
And, masked in friendship, leads our minds astray!
| 0
|
Still to admire the brother's braver arms;
| 2
|
Still to despise a Paris' meaner charms.
| 2
|
Behold great Hector ' -- issue from the walls.
| 2
|
As each bold Briton who aspires to fame,
| 3
|
Still in his eye, some brave some honoured name,
| 1
|
But if great Hector on that fatal day
| 3
|
Though in his breast his brother's deeds despise,
| 0
|
Behold for him a sacrifice he lies;
| 1
|
Behold him stretched ' -- dragged at Achilles' car,
| 1
|
Who strays from virtue, ever sure to find
| 0
|
Some dire disaster lags not far behind.
| 0
|
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