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Truth in Fiction

Or, Morality in Masquerade. A Collection of Two hundred twenty five Select Fables of Aesop, and other Authors. Done into English Verse. By Edmund Arwaker
  

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FABLE XXIX. Jupiter:
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FABLE XXIX. Jupiter:

Or, Lust and Modesty incompatible

Jove , to Compleat his Creature Man, impress'd
All requisite Affections in his Breast;
But, in the Throng, he had omitted Shame,
And knew not how to introduce the Dame:
He found, her Presence there was much requir'd;
A needful Virtue, tho' not oft' desir'd;
And bid her justle in among the Crow'd:
Whereat she blush'd, and the Command withstood:
But, urg'd by Jove, reply'd; I will Obey,
If you will keep that Monster, Lust, away:
For he will all the Microcosm inflame
With burning Passions, which I blush to name:
And if he enters, I must straight retire,
As Men from Houses that are all on-Fire.

The MORAL.

‘Where Modesty vouchsafes to fix her Seat,
Lust must withdraw, or she will soon retreat:
‘The diff'rent Passions will not brook one Sphere,
‘And never in each other's Bounds appear:

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‘For an immortal Quarrel they maintain,
‘And Converse, by Antipathy, refrain.
‘Whoever is to Modesty enclin'd,
‘Do's against Lust a strong Cathartick find;
‘And he, whose loose Desires by Lust are sway'd,
‘Do's Modesty, with open Force, invade:
‘Thus as, to either, Men themselves devote,
‘They chuse a Poison, or an Antidote.