The posthumous works of Ann Eliza Bleecker, in prose and verse To which is added, a collection of essays, prose and poetical |
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On a great COXCOMB recovering from an Indisposition.
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![]() | The posthumous works of Ann Eliza Bleecker, in prose and verse | ![]() |
On a great COXCOMB recovering from an Indisposition.
Narcissus (as Ovid informs us) expir'd,Consum'd by the flames his own beauty had fir'd;
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And sighs for his other fair-self in the glass)
Loves to greater excess than Narcissus—for why?
He loves himself too much to let himself die.
![]() | The posthumous works of Ann Eliza Bleecker, in prose and verse | ![]() |