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Durgen

Or, A Plain Satyr upon a Pompous Satyrist. Amicably Inscrib'd, by the Author, to those Worthy and Ingenious Gentlemen misrepresented in a late invective Poem, call'd, The Dunciad [by Edward Ward]
 

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Ye Gods, that dwell in some ætherial Mist,
Or only in poetick Brains subsist,

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Inspire my humble Muse with pow'r to please
All, but the common Foes to human ease,
Whose restless Envy labours to postpone
And stigmatize all Merit but their own:
If I must rail, when in my spleen I write,
Be them alone the objects of my spight;
But let my Friends be sacred to my Muse,
And no ill-natur'd Jest their favour lose;
By me, let no ingrateful Dirt be thrown,
But all their Faults be hid, as if they'd none;
Poor mercenary Wits may be allow'd,
With naked Scandal to divert the Crowd,
But Poets, re-refin'd from common Dust,
Should file and polish off all earthy rust,
And, like the Gods, be generous and just.