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530

own,

535

540

How their wild monarch, like the bestial race,
Spreads the pollution of his lewd embrace ?
Unaw'd by reverence of connubial rites,
In multitudes, luxurious, he delights:
When gorg'd with feafting, and inflam'd with wine,
No joys can fate him, and no laws confine;
Forbidding Nature, then, commands in vain,
From fifters and from mothers to abftain.
The Greek and Roman, with a trembling ear,
Th' unwilling crime of Oedipus may hear;
While Parthian kings like deeds, with glory,
And boaft inceftuous titles to the throne.
If crimes like thefe they can fecurely brave,
What laws, what power, fhall thy Cornelia fave?
Think, how the helpless matron may be led,
The thoufandth harlot, to the royal bed.
Though when the tyrant clafps his noble flave,
And hears to whom her plighted hand fhe gave,
Her beauties oft in fcorn he fhall prefer,
And choose t' infult the Roman name in her.
Thefe are the powers to whom thou would'ft fubmit,
And Rome's revenge and Craffus' quite forget.
Thy caufe, preferr'd to his, becomes thy fhame,
And blots, in common, thine and Cæfar's name.
With how much greater glory might you join,
To drive the Daci, or to free the Rhine!

545

550

How well your conquering legions might you lead, 555 'Gainst the fierce Bactrian and the haughty Mede! Level proud Babylon's afpiring domes,

And with their fpoils inrich our flaughter'd leaders

tombs ?

. No

H

No longer, Fortune! let our friendship laft,

Our peace, ill-omen'd, with the barbarous Eft; 560 If civil ftrife with Cæfar's conqueft end,

565

570

To Afia let his profperous arms extend :
Eternal wars there let the victor wage,
And on proud Parthia pour the Roman rage.
There I, there all, his victories may bless,
And Rome herself make vows for his fuccefs.
Whene'er thou pass the cold Araxes o'er,
An aged fhade fhall greet thee on the shore,
Transfix'd with arrows, mournful, pale, and hoar.
And art thou (fhall he cry, complaining) come
In peace and friendship, to thefe foes of Rome?
Thou! from whofe hand we hop'd revenge in vain,
Poor naked ghofts, a thin unbury'd train,
That flit, lamenting, o'er this dreary plain?
On every
fide new objects fhall disclose
Some mournful monument of Roman woes;
On every wall fresh marks thou shalt defcry,
Where pale Hefperian heads were fix'd on high:
Each river, as he rolls his purple tide,

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575

Shall own his waves in Latian flaughter dy'd.
If fights like these thou canft with patience bear,

580

What are the horrors which thy foul would fear?
Ev'n Cæfar's felf with joy may be beheld,
Inthron'd on flaughter in Emathia's field.

Say then, we grant, thy cautions were not vain, 585
Of Punic frauds and Juba's faithlefs reign;

Abounding Egypt thall receive thee yet,

And yield, unqueftion'd, a fecure retreat.

By

By nature ftrengthen'd with a dangerous ftrand,
Her Syrts and untry'd channels guard the land.
Rich in the fatnefs of her plenteous foil,
She plants her only confidence in Nile.
Her monarch, bred beneath thy guardian cares,
His crown, the largefs of thy bounty, wears.
Nor let unjust fufpicions brand his truth;
Candour and innocence ftill dwell with youth.
Truft not a power accuitom'd to be great,
And vers'd in wicked policies of state.
Old kings, long harden'd in the regal trade,
By interest and by craft alone are sway'd,
And violate with eafe the leagues they made:
While new ones ftill make confcience of the trust,
True to their friends, and to their subjects juft.

590

595

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610

He fpoke; the liftening fathers all were mov'd,
And with concurring votes the thought approv'd. 605
So much ev'n dying Liberty prevail'd,
When Pompey's fuffrage, and his counsel fail'd.
And now Cilicia's coaft the fleet forfake,
And o'er the watery plain for Cyprus make.
Cyprus to love's ambrofial goddess dear,
For ever grateful smoke the altars there :
Indulgent ftill fhe hears the Paphian vows,
And loves the favourite feas from whence the rofe.
So Fame reports, if we may credit Fame,
When her fond tales the birth of gods proclaim,
Unborn, and from eternity the fame.

The craggy clifts of Cyprus quickly past,
The chief runs fouthward o'er the ocean vaft.

}

Nor

625

Nor views he, through the murky veil of night,
The Cafian mountains far distinguish'd height,
The high-hung lantern, or the beamy light.
Hap'ly at leng the labouring canvas bore
Full on the fartheft bounds of Egypt's fhore,
Where near Pelufium parting Nile defcends,
And in her utmost eastern channel ends.
'Twas now the time, when equal Jove on high
Had hung the golden balance of the sky :
But, ah! not long fuch just proportions last,
The righteous season foon was chang'd and pass'd;
And Spring's incroachment, on the shortening fhade,
Was fully to the wintery nights repaid:

When to the chief from fhore they made report,
That, near high Cafium, lay the Pharian court.
This known, he thither turns his ready fail,
The light yet lafting with the favouring gale.
The fleet arriv'd, the news flies fwiftly round,
And their new guests the troubled court confound.
The time was fhort; howe'er the council met,
Vile minifters, a monftrous motley fet.

635

Of thefe, the chief in honour, and the best,

640

Was old Achorëus the Memphian priest:

In Ifis and Ofiris he believ'd,

And reverend tales, from fire to fon receiv'd ;

Could mark the fwell of Nile's increasing tide,

And many an Apis in his time had dy'd ;

645

Yet was his age with gentleft manners fraught,
Humbly he spoke, and modeftly he taught.
With good intent the pious feer arose,

And told how much their state to Pompey owes:

What

}

What large amends their monarch ought to make,
659
Both for his own, and for his father's fake.
But fate had plac'd a subtler speaker there,
A tongue more fitted for a tyrant's ear,
Pothinus, deep in arts of mifchief read,
Who thus, with false persuasion, blindly led
The eafy king, to doom his guardian dead :
To ftrictest juftice many ills belong,
And honesty is often in the wrong:
Chiefly when ftubborn rules her zealots push,
To favour those whom fortune means to crush.
But thou, oh royal Ptolemy! be wife;

660

Change with the gods, and fly whom fortune flies. Not earth, from yon high heavens which we admire, Not from the watery element the fire,

Are sever'd by distinction half so wide,

As intereft and integrity divide.

The mighty power of kings no more prevails,
When juftice comes with her deciding scales.

665

Freedom for all things, and a lawless fword,
Alone fupport an arbitrary lord.

He that is cruel must be bold in ills,

And find his fafety from the blood he fpills.
For piety, and virtue's starving rules,

670

To mean retirements let them lead their fools:
There, may they ftill ingloriously be good;
None can be fafe in courts, who blush at blood.
Nor let this fugitive despise thy years,

Or think a name, like his, can caufe thy fears:
Exert thyfelf, and let him feel thy power,

675

And know, that we dare drive him from our fhore. 680

But

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