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The Poetical Works of Anna Seward

With Extracts from her Literary Correspondence. Edited by Walter Scott ... In Three Volumes

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PROLOGUE
  
  
  
  
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174

PROLOGUE

TO THE FORTUNATE DISAPPOINTMENT.

To teach our ductile youth the pleasing art,
Whose powers persuasive steal into the heart,
When graceful motion, and when accent just,
Prove faithful ever to the writer's trust,
No idle aim, no light design betrays,
For virtue smiles on generous thirst of praise:
And oft exterior elegance we find
Give added influence to the noble mind!
Since warmest glow the emulative fires,
If, while our sense approves, our taste admires.
But more important, more exalted views
Prompt the kind efforts of our moral muse.

175

Still (that the youthful maid each fault may scorn,
Of cold reserve, or baser malice born)
Bid fair Ingenuousness each thought reveal,
To the mild guardians of her studied weal,
Whom long experience has empower'd to know,
When fleeting pleasures lead to lasting woe.
Thus, while forewarn'd by them, ye shun the bowers
Where serpents lurk beneath the gaudy flowers,
Oft will their cares the passing hour employ
To ope for you the springs of genuine joy;
Point the safe track where Life's worst perils cease,
The ways of pleasantness, the paths of peace.
 

A play written by Mrs Short, then of Newport, and represented by the pupils of her seminary.