صور الصفحة
PDF
النشر الإلكتروني
[ocr errors][merged small]

Chorus. Taught by virtue, you may climb

Higher than the sphery chime;
Or, if Virtue feeble were,

Heaven itself would stoop to her.

THE END.

450

EPILOGUE.

SPOKEN BY

EUPHROSYNE, WITH A WAND AND CUP.

SOME critic, or I'm much deceived, will ask,
"What means this wild, this allegoric masque?
Beyond all bounds of truth this author shoots ;
Can wands or cups transform men into brutes?
'Tis idle stuff!”—And yet I'll prove it true;
Attend; for sure I mean it not of you.
The mealy fop; that tastes my cup, may try,
How quick the change from beau to butterfly;
But o'er the Insect should the Brute prevail,
He grins a monkey with a length of tail.
One stoke of this,* as sure as Cupid's arrow,
Turns the warm youth into a wanton sparrow.
Nay, the cold prude becomes a slave to love,
Feels a new warmth, and cooes a billing dove.
The sly coquet, whose artful tears beguile
Unwary hearts, weeps a false crocodile.
Dull poring pedants, shock'd at truth's keen light,
Turn moles, and plunge again in friendly night ;
Misers grow vultures, of rapacious mind,
Or more than vultures, they devour their kind;

The Wand.

[ocr errors][merged small]

Flatt'rers cameleons, creeping on the ground,
With ev'ry changing colour changing round.
The party-fool, beneath his heavy load,
Drudges a driven ass thro' dirty road.
While guzzling sots, their spouses say, are hogs ;
And snarling critics, authors swear, are dogs.
But to be grave, I hope we've prov'd at least,
All vice is folly, and makes man a beast.

28

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

London Printed for J.Bell British Library Strandio May 1791.

« السابقةمتابعة »