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Amasia, or, The Works of the Muses

A Collection of Poems. In Three Volumes. By Mr John Hopkins

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To Mr ---
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

To Mr ---

[In vain, My Friend, your kind advice you send]

In vain, My Friend, your kind advice you send,
Bid me Love on, you will be more my Friend,
The Fetter'd Wretch, not strugling, feels no pain,
'Tis he's Tormented, who would stretch the Chain,
Not the Eternal links of fate can prove,
More firm and strong, than are my links of Love.
Bound to my fair Amasia I appear,
(O would to Heav'n, I were bound truly here!)
'Tis more than freedom, to be so confin'd,
She's all the Charm of her whole Beauteous kind.
Homage to her would you confinement call?
We know the Deity is every where, and all.
Confin'd to her! alas! it cannot be,
But bless me, Heaven's! Make her confin'd to me.
No more advise me to forsake my fair,
I must Love on, yet, while I Love, Despair.

148

In vain you strive my Passion to remove,
For Oh! I cannot live, unless I Love.
If you are griev'd I bear Amasia's scorn,
Quench not my Fires, but make her kindly burn.
Love is a Weight to me indeed severe,
But should she help, I could the burthen bear.
Beneath the load I should no longer Bow,
For that would raise me, which depresses now.
Tho' no such hope does to your Friend remain,
I boast the freedom to embrace my Chain.
A Slave how Wretched must your Sylvius grow,
When not permitted to be longer so?
Kind tho' you are, you seem not kind to me,
For he Enthrals me, who would set me free.
By no device you can obtain your end,
I can't my Mistress lose, but may my Friend.
In vain, oft practis'd methods you devise,
'Tis all in vain, Amasia still has Eyes.
No more to me your hard addresses move,
For, I assure you, by the Gods above,
I can't—I will not part from what so dear I Love.