The Second Part of Original Poems | ||
The Remonstrance.
I
Veil, Flora! veil, in Pity to Mankind,Those Charms which make all wretched, but the Blind:
What Eye can such excessive Lustre bear!
Seeing is Love, and loving is Despair;
For soothing Hope but small Relief can give,
Where Multitudes must die, and only one can live.
99
II
Forbear, bright Maid! to find a savage Joy,In having Pow'r unbounded to destroy:
With generous Pity human Quiet spare,
For gentle Mercy best becomes the Fair:
Withdraw those Charms whence fatal Mischiefs flow,
And since you cannot cure, prevent the Woe.
The Second Part of Original Poems | ||