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Proud rogues, who shar'd the South-sea prey,

And sprung, like mushrooms, in a day!
They think it mean to condescend
To know a brother or a friend:

They blush to hear their mother's name,
And by their pride expose their shame.
As cross his yard, at early day,
A careful farmer took his way,
He stopp'd, and, leaning on his fork,
Observ'd the flail's incessant work.
In thought he measur'd all his store-
His geese, his hogs, he number'd o'er ;
In fancy weigh'd the fleeces shorn,
And multiplied the next year's corn.
A Barley-mow, which stood beside,
Thus to its musing master cry'd :—
Say, good Sir, is it fit or right
To treat me with neglect and slight-
Me, who contribute to your cheer,
And raise your mirth with ale and beer?
Why thus insulted, thus disgrac'd,
And that vile dunghill near me plac'd?
Are those poor sweepings of a groom,
That filthy sight, that nauseous fume,
Meet objects here? Command it hence!
A thing so mean must give offence.

The humble Dunghill thus reply'd:-
Thy master hears, and mocks thy pride.
Insult not thus the meek and low;
In me thy benefactor know:

My warm assistance gave thee birth,
Or thou hadst perish'd low in earth:
But upstarts, to support their station,
Cancel at once all obligation.

FABLE XXXVI.

Pythagoras and the Countryman. PYTHAG'RAS rose at early dawn, By soaring meditation drawn; To breathe the fragrance of the day, Through flow'ry fields he took his way. In musing contemplation warm, His steps misled him to a farm, Where, on the ladder's topmost round, A peasant stood; the hammer's sound Shook the weak barn. Say, friend, what

care

Calls for thy honest labour there?

The Clown with surly voice replies,
Vengeance aloud for justice cries.
This kite, by daily rapine fed,
My hens' annoy, my turkeys' dread,
At length his forfeit life hath paid;
See on the wall his wings display'd;
Here nail'd, a terror to his kind,
My fowls shall future safety find,
My yard the thriving poultry feed,
And my barn's refuse fat the breed.

Friend, says the Sage, the doom is wise;
For public good the murd'rer dies.
But if these tyrants of the air

Demand a sentence so severe,
Think how the glutton, man, devours;
What bloody feasts regale his hours!
Oh, impudence of pow'r and might,
Thus to condemn a hawk or kite,
When thou, perhaps, carniv'rous sinner!
Hadst pullets yesterday for dinner!

Hold, ery'd the Clown, with passion
heated;

Shall kites and men alike be treated? When Heav'n the world with creatures stor❜d,

Man was ordain'd their sov'reign lord.
Thus tyrants boast, the Sage reply'd,
Whose murders spring from pow'r and
pride.

Own, then, this man-like kite is slain
Thy greater lux'ry to sustain;

For "petty rogues submit to fate,

"That great ones may enjoy their state*."

FABLE XXXVII.

The Farmer's Wife and the Raven.

WHY are those tears? Why droops your head?

Is, then, your other husband dead?

• Garth's Dispensary.

Or does a worse disgrace betide?
Hath no one since his death apply'd?.
Alas! you know the cause too well!-
The salt is spilt-to me it fell!
Then, to contribute to my loss,
My knife and fork were laid across!
On Friday too-the day I dread!
Would I were safe at home in bed!
Last night (I vow to Heav'n 'tis true!)
Bounce from the fire a coffin flew !
Next post some fatal news shall tell-
God send my Cornish friends be well!
Unhappy widow! cease thy tears,
Nor feel affliction in thy fears.
Let not thy stomach be suspended;
Eat now, and weep when dinner's ended;
And when the butler clears the table,
For thy dessert I'll read my fable.

Betwixt her swagging panniers' load,
A Farmer's Wife to market rode,
And jogging on, with thoughtful care,
Summ'd up the profits of her ware;
When, starting from her silver dream,
Thus far and wide was heard her

scream:

"That Raven on yon left-hand oak (Curse on his ill-betiding croak!)

Bodes me no good! No more she said, When poor blind Ball, with stumbling tread,

Fell prone; o'erturn'd the panniers lay, And her mash'd eggs bestrew'd the way.›

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She, sprawling in the yellow road, Rail'd, swore, and curs'd,-Thou croaking toad,

A murrain take thy whoreson throat!
I knew misfortune in the note.

Dame, quoth the Raven, spare your

oaths,

Unclench your fist, and wipe your clothes.
But why on me those curses thrown?
Goody, the fault was all your own;
For had you laid this brittle ware
On Dun, the old sure-footed mare,
Though all the ravens of the hundred
With croaking had your tongue out-thun-
der'd,

Sure-footed Dun had kept her legs,
And you, good woman, sav'd your eggs.

FABLE XXXVIII.

The Turkey and the Ant.

IN other men we faults can spy, And blame the mote that dims their eye; Each little speck and blemish findTo our own stronger errors blind.

A Turkey, tir'd of common food, Forsook the barn, and sought the wood; Behind her ran an infant train, Collecting here and there a grain.

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