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Pierides

or The Muses Mount. By Hugh Crompton
  

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37. Three Friends.
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54

37. Three Friends.

1

Theer certain friends (whom fortune did expose
To many harms and dangers,
And circumvented with a world of foes;
Some neighbours, others strangers,)

2

VVell blest with vigour, and prepar'd with arms,
And stedfastly conjoin'd
VVith resolution to oppose all harms,
VVith one entire mind.

3

(Their minds thus melted into one) they went
VVith fury, to resist
Each stop that stood their projects to prevent,
And each Antagonist.

4

Nor did success prove poorer unto these,
Then 't was fore-doom'd to do:
For many a one they shackled by degrees,
And many a one they slew.

5

Nor did their thirsty swords forbear to spill
The vitals of their foes;
Nor sheath their bloody jaws in scabbards, till
There was no more t' oppose.

6

Now all is won, and every prize their own,

55

The trine is sweetly blest
(All the extinsick trouble being gone)
VVith native peace and rest.

7

But pride (the darling of good fortune) sprung
(Arm'd with desire of strife)
These glorious Champions, and these friends among;
And spoil'd their friendly life.

8

Nor would it vanish, till it had untwisted
The knots once love had ti'd;
And now each friend his bosom-friend resisted,
till they were all destroy'd.

The Moral.

These trusty friends three Nations were, well known
To be subordinate to a single Crown;
And while they lov'd, the world could not out-vie
But their intestin hate did soon destroy them.
Intrinsick strife, and home bred contradiction,
Are the next road to ruine and affliction.