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A Miscellany of Poems

consisting of Original Poems, Translations, Pastorals in the Cumberland Dialect, Familiar Epistles, Fables, Songs, and Epigrams, by the late Reverend Josiah Relph ... With a Preface and a Glossary

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From BOETIUS.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

From BOETIUS.

Who ne'er dejected, ne'er elate,
Even alike in ev'ry state,
Can with a brave and stedfast soul
The fierce assaults of Fate controul.
Him move no terrors of the main,
Tormented and o'erturn'd in vain;
No fires that from Vesevus roll
In dreadful volumes to the Pole;

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No flaming thunderbolts that hide
In dust the lofty turret's pride.
Why does the Tyrant's fuming rage
The wretch's wonder thus engage?
Wild passions from thy soul be rent
And all that rage is idly spent;
But who admits or hope or fear
Not firm nor resolute to bear,
Has thrown away his shield, gives ground,
And is an easy captive found.