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Epigrams theological, philosophical, and romantick

Six books, also the Socratic Session, or the Arraignment and Conviction, of Julius Scaliger, with other Select Poems. By S. Sheppard

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Epig. 23. On excellent strong Beere.
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126

Epig. 23. On excellent strong Beere.

Plumpe cheek'd Bromeus venge thy wrong,
Barly, as thy berry strong
Makes us talk, and sing, and laugh,
As if we did Nepenthe quaffe;
With Elder leaves our heads we twine,
Not with the Ivie-creeping Vine,
And Oake-leav'd Javelings we beare,
Which in our drunken rage we teare:
Thy Orgies must ever faile,
If this strong Liquors fame prevaile,
All for to drink will agree:
Smooth chin'd Anacreon could not be
More heated with his Corsick vine,
Nor Flaccus with his Falern wine,
Then I with this most potent Beere,
Kept in a Marble Vault a yeare:
And now it sparkling freely drills,
Cur'st be he a drop that spills:
Fill the steepe flaggons, and each pot,
Drink till all sorrow be forgot.

127

Had great Johnson had the hap
To taste of what flowes from this tap,
Nine muses had no number been
To contend 'gainst such Hypocrene,
And he (no doubt) had finish'd well
His Mortimer, and Issabell:
Nymbly dance all in a Ring,
Pæans to god-BARLY sing,
Gallop round in Faerie measures,
Oh that in height of all these pleasures,
Charmed by the sleepy God,
Ere the Hymn is sung, I nod.