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"He once or twice had penn'd a sonnet;
Yet hop'd, that he might save his bacon:
Numbers would give their oaths upon it,

He ne'er was for a conj'rer taken.”

The ghostly prudes with hagged face
Already had condemn'd the sinner.

My lady rose, and with a grace—

She smil❜d, and bid him come to dinner.

"Jesu-Maria! Madam Bridget,

Why, what can the Viscountess mean?" (Cried the square-hoods in woful fidget) "The times are alter'd quite and clean!

"Decorum's turn'd to mere civility;

Her air and all her manners show it. Commend me to her affability!

Speak to a commoner and a poet!"

[Here five hundred stanzas are lost.]

And so God save our noble king,

And guard us from long-winded lubbers,

That to eternity would sing,

And keep my lady from her rubbers.

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180

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ODE

ON THE PLEASURE ARISING FROM

VICISSITUDE.

Left unfinished by Mr. Gray. With additions by Mr. Mason, distinguished by inverted commas.

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Weakly green its budding sprays." Warton's 1st of April, i. 180.

See Mr. Mant's note upon the passage.

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"O'er the broad downs a novel race,

Frisk the lambs with faltering pace." T. Warton, i. 185.

Ver. 17. Rise, my soul! on wings of fire] Mr. Mason informs us, that he has heard Gray say, that Mr. Gresset's 'Epitre à ma Sour' gave him the first idea of this Ode; and whoever, he says, compares it with the French Poem, will find some slight traits of resemblance, but chiefly in the author's seventh stanza. The following lines seem to have been in Gray's remembrance at this place:

"Mon ame, trop long tems flétrie

Va de nouveau s'épanouir;

Et loin de toute rêverie

Voltiger avec le Zéphire,

Occupé tout entier du soin du plaisir d'être," &c.

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