University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
Labour in Vain

or, What Signifies Little or Nothing. Viz. I. The Poor Man's Petitioning at Court. II. Expectation of Benefit from a Covetous Man in his Life-time. III. The Marriage of an Old Man to a Young Woman. IV. Endeavours to Regulate Mens Manners by Preaching or Writing. V. Being a Jacobite. VI. Confining an Insolvent Debtor. VII. Promise of Secrecy in a Conspiracy. VIII. An Enquiry after a Place [by Edward Ward]

collapse section
expand section
expand section
expand section
collapse section
Endeavours to Regulate Mens Manners by Preaching or Writing.
 
expand section
expand section
expand section

Endeavours to Regulate Mens Manners by Preaching or Writing.


12

[He that would bar me of a coming Joy]

He that would bar me of a coming Joy,
And by strict Rules, my Liberty Destroy,
In Trammels makes me Pace away my Life,
'Twixt Nature and his Rules is constant strife;

13

So Irksom, and Uneasie I must be,
By Reason of their great Antipathy;
This is the Language of th'Unthinking Man,
Who led by Custom, loves to be Prophane;
And will not change his Road, what e're you Teach,
Scarce tho' a Jonah once again should Preach:
But still that Monkey, Man, would Imitate,
And Virtue Practice, Copy'd from the Great.
Examples, wanting Precepts, are but Vain;
And moving Arguments in florid strain,
Won't make the Blockish Crow'd from Ill Refrain.