The Poetical Works of Henry Brooke ... In Four Volumes Octavo. Revised and corrected by the Original Manuscript With a Portrait of the Author, and His Life By Miss Brooke. The Third Edition |
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The Poetical Works of Henry Brooke | ||
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AIR III.
Plut.Would you silence a Patriot committee,
Touch their lips with this magical Wand;
Through country, and senate, and city,
'Tis the lock and the key of the land.
II
Take a piece of this same from your coffer,Display to the Voter your pelf;
And the wretch, having nothing to offer,
Will frugally sell you—Himself.
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III
'Tis a shot for the fowl of all feather,A bait for the gust of all fish;
To this every gudgeon will gather,
And plump, ready drest, in your dish.
IV
If the booby, your Pupil, so dull is,He scarce can remember his name;
Yet his mouth it shall open, like Tully's,
When fed with a spoon of this same.
V
To a rascal, a bear, and a blockhead,Unconscious of mood, or of tense,
This plastic receipt, in his pocket,
Gives grace, figure, virtue, and sense.
VI
Old Saints will for this sell their manuals;O'er this, at your sovereign nod,
Old Judges will skip like young spaniels,
And Cardinals kiss you this rod.
VII
To study aught else is but nonsense;From hence all Philosophy springs—
'Tis the Crown, Beauty, Cause, and Good Conscience,
Of Priests, Ladies, Lawyers, and Kings.
The Poetical Works of Henry Brooke | ||