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1. Volume the first



The works of the Earl of Roscommon



THE Twenty Second ODE OF THE First Book of Horace.

Virtue, dear friend, needs no defence,
The surest guard is innocence:
None knew, 'till guilt created fear,
What darts, or poison'd arrows were.
Integrity undaunted goes
Through Lybian sands, or Scythian snows,
Or where Hydaspes' wealthy side
Pays tribute to the Persian pride.
For as, by am'rous thoughts betray'd,
Careless in Sabin woods I stray'd,
A grisly foaming wolf, unfed,
Met me unarm'd, yet, trembling, fled.
No beast of more portentous size
In the Hercinian forest lies;
None fiercer, in Numidia bred,
With Carthage were in triumph led.
Set me in the remotest place,
That Neptune's frozen arms embrace;
Where angry Jove did never spare
One breath of kind and temp'rate air.
Set me where on some pathless plain
The swarthy Africans complain,
To see the chariot of the sun
So near their scorching country run.
The burning zone, the frozen isles,
Shall hear me sing of Cælia's smiles:
All cold, but in her breast, I will despise,
And dare all heat, but that of Cælia's eyes.

39

The SAME imitated.

I

Virtue, dear friend, needs no defence,
No arms, but its own innocence;
Quivers and bows, and poison'd darts,
Are only us'd by guilty hearts.

II

An honest mind safely alone
May travel through the burning zone;
Or thro' the deepest Scythian snows,
Or where the fam'd Hydaspes flows.

III

While rul'd by a resistless fire,
Our great Orinda I admire,
The hungry wolves that see me stray,
Unarm'd and single, run away.

IV

Set me in the remotest place
That ever Neptune did embrace;
When there her image fills my breast,
Helicon is not half so blest.

V

Leave me upon some Lybian plain,
So she my fancy entertain,
And when the thirsty monsters meet,
They'll all pay homage to my feet.

VI

The magic of Orinda's name
Not only can their fierceness tame,
But if that mighty word I once rehearse,
They seem submissively to roar in verse.
 

Mrs. Catherine Philips.