A Letter from the same to the Rev. Mr. Birt A Letter from the same to the Right Hon. Henry Ditto........Ditto........ Ditto.... A Letter from Sir C. H. Williams to the Rev. Mr. Birt Ditto........ ........ ditto to the same.. Ditto........ ditto to the same.. 77 82 85 91 96 102 Ditto........ ditto to the same.. To Chloe, a Persuasive to love-" Since Nature ne'er acted in vain " ... 110 The Fair Moralist-" As late by Thames's verdant side" .... 111 On Pope's having just published his Dunciad-" At length Pope conquers: Hervey, Wortley yield". 112 Verses addressed to the Countess of Essex-" Fanny beware of flattery" ..... Le Pater-noster de Madame de Pompadour-"Grand ..... ..... Verses, written by Sir C. H. Williams, on seeing a An Account of the Kings and Government of Poland 113 118 124 in Letters to the Right hon. Henry Fox i to the end : ON BENEVOLENCE; AN EPISTLE TO EUMENES. KIND to IND to my frailties still, Eumenes, hear; Once more I try the patience of your ear. Not oft I sing; the happier for the town, So stunn'd already they're quite stupid grown Of nauseous verses offer'd once a week, 'Twas ne'er my pride to shine by flashy fits Content if some few friends indulge my name, So slightly am I stung with Love of Fame, I would not scrawl one hundred idle lines- Yet once a moon, perhaps, I steal a night; And, if our Sire Apollo pleases, write. You smile; but all the train the Muse that follow, Christians and dunces, still we quote Apollo. To Goths, that stare astonish'd at their verse; I to sound judges from the mob appeal, And write to those who most my subject feel. Eumenes, these dry moral lines I trust With you, whom nought that's moral can disgust. With you I venture, in plain home-spun sense, What I imagine of Benevolence. Of all the monsters of the human kind, What strikes you most is the low selfish mind. You wonder how, without one liberal joy, 'Tis true, he cannot boast an angel's share, Heav'n form'd him too, and doubtless for some use; [views. But Crane-court knows not yet all nature's 'Tis chiefly taste, or blunt, or gross, or fine, Makes life insipid, bestial, or divine. Better be born, with Taste, to little rent, Than the dull monarch of a continent. Without this bounty which the gods bestow, Can Fortune make one favourite happy?—No. e; As well might Fortune in her frolic vein, Yet these are joys, with some of better clay, To soothe the toils of life's embarrass'd way. These the fine frame with charming horrors chill, And give the nerves delightfully to thrill. |