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So faid upon the god he flies,

In cords the struggling captive ties..

"Now, Proteus! now (to truth compell'd)

Speak, and confefs thy art excell❜d.

Ufe ftrength, furprize, or what you will,
The Courtier finds evafions ftill;

Not to be bound by any ties,
And never forc'd to leave his lyes."

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HOSE who in quarrels interpofe,
Muft often wipe a bloody nose.
A Mastiff, of true English blood,
Lov'd fighting better than his food,
When dogs were fnarling for a bone,
He long'd to make the war his own,
And often found (when two contend)
To interpofe obtain'd his end.
He glory'd in his limping pace;
The fears of honour feam'd his face;
In every limb a gafh appears,

And frequent fights retrench'd his ears.

As on a time he heard from far

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Two dogs engag'd in noify war,

Away he scours, and lays about him,

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Refolv'd no fray fhould be without him.

Forth

Forth from his yard a tanner flies, And to the bold intruder cries:

"A cudgel fhall correct your manners:

Whence fprung this cursed hate to tanners?
While on my dog you vent your spite,
Sirrah! 'tis me you dare not bite."
To fee the battle thus perplex'd,
With equal rage a butcher, vex'd,
Hoarse-screaming from the circled crowd,
To the curs'd Mastiff cries aloud :
"Both Hockleyhole and Marybone
The combats of my dog have known:
He ne'er, like bullies, coward-hearted,
Attacks in public, to be parted.

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Think not, rash fool, to fhare his fame;

Be his the honour, or the fhame."

Thus faid, they swore, and rav'd like thunder,

Then dragg'd their faften'd dogs afunder;

While clubs and kicks from every fide
Rebounded from the Maftiff's hide.

All reeking now with fweat and blood,
A while the parted warriors ftood;
Then pour'd upon the meddling foe,
Who, worried, howl'd and fprawl'd below.
He rofe; and, limping from the fray,
By both files mangled, fneak'd away.

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FABLE

FABLE

XXXV.

THE BARLEY-MOW AND THE DUNGHILL.

OW many faucy airs we meet

How

From Temple-bar to Aldgate-ftreet!

Proud rogues, who fhar'd the South-fea prey,
And fprung like mushrooms in a day!
They think it mean to condefcend

To know a brother or a friend;

They blush to hear their mother's name,
And by their pride expofe their fhame.
As crofs his yard, at early day,
A careful farmer took his way,
He stopp'd; and, leaning on his fork,
Obferv'd the flail's inceffant work.
In thought he measur'd all his store,
His geefe, his hogs, he number'd o'er;
In fancy weigh'd the fleeces fhorn,
And multiply'd the next year's corn.
A Barley-mow, which stood befide,
Thus to its mufing mafter cry'd:
"Say, good Sir, is it fit or right
To treat me with neglect and flight?.
Me, who contribute to your cheer,

And raise your mirth with ale and beer?
Why thus infulted, thus difgrac'd,
And that vile Dunghill near me plac'd ?

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Are

Are thofe poor fweepings of a groom,
That filthy fight, that naufeous fume,
Meet objects here? Command it hence ;
A thing fo mean must give offence."

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The humble Dunghill thus reply'd : "Thy master hears, and mocks thy pride: Infult not thus the meek and low;

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In me thy benefactor know;

My warm affiftance gave thee birth,
Or thou hadst perish'd low in earth;
But up-ftarts, to fupport their ftation,
Cancel at once all obligation."

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PYTHAGORAS AND THE COUNTRYMAN.

PYTHAGORAS rofe at early dawn,
By foaring meditation drawn ;

To breathe the fragrance of the day,
Through flowery fields he took his way.
In mufing contemplation warm,
His fteps mifled him to a farm,
Where on a ladder's topmost round
A peafant ftood; the hammer's found
Shook the weak barn. 66

Say, friend, what care

Calls for thy honeft labour there?" The Clown, with furly voice replies, "Vengeance aloud for juftice cries.

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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 fhall future fafety find;
My yard the thriving poultry feed,
And my barns' refufe fat the breed."

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Friend, fays the Sage, the doom is wife;
For public good the murderer dies :

But, if thefe tyrants of the air
Demand a fentence fo fevere,

Think how the glutton, man, devours;
What bloody feafts regale his hours!
O impudence of power and might,
Thus to condemn a hawk or kite,

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When thou, perhaps, carnivorous finner,
Hadft pullets yesterday for dinner!"

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"Hold, cry'd the Clown, with paffion heated,

Shall kites and men alike be treated?

When Heaven the world with creatures ftor'd,
Man was ordain'd their fovereign lord.”"
"Thus tyrants boaft, the Sage reply'd,
Whofe murders fpring from power and pride.
Own then this manlike kite is flain,

Thy greater luxury to fuftain;

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For "Petty rogues fubmit to Fate,

"That great ones may enjoy their ftate *."

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* Garth's Difpenfary.

FABLE

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