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The works of Mr. Thomas Brown

Serious and Comical, In Prose and Verse; In four volumes. The Fourth Edition, Corrected, and much Enlarged from his Originals never before publish'd. With a key to all his Writings

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Antenor's Speech in the Second Æneid, applied to the Declaration for Liberty of Conscience. In the Year 1687.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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Antenor's Speech in the Second Æneid, applied to the Declaration for Liberty of Conscience. In the Year 1687.

Timeo Danaos, & dona ferentes.

You dull Dissenters, what vain foily blinds
Your Senses thus, and captivates your Minds?
Think you this proffer'd Liberty is free
From Tricks, and Snares, and Papal Treachery?
Think you 'twas meant according to the Letter?
Oh that such plodding Heads shou'd know the Pope no better,
Trust me, this Kindness either was design'd
T'inflame our Quarrels, and our Weakness find:
Or else the Breach was open'd at a venture,
That at one Hole both Cowl and Cloak might enter.
Pray Heav'n there be no farther Mischief meant,
But I'm afraid there's Roman Opium in't.
Be't what it will, the gilded Pill suspect,
And with a smiling scorn your proffer'd Fate reject;
A Papist, tho' ungiving, means you evil,
But when he scatters Gifts and Mercies, he's the Devil.