Weigh this, ye pupils of Voltaire ! A crown has been refign'd by more, Though will refign'd the meaneft makes And richer in celestial eyes, Than he who wears a crown; Hence, in the bofom cold of age, To shine in fong; and bid me boast Our thoughts in life's December freeze, First! greatest beft! grant what I wrote For others, ne'er may rife To brand the writer; thou alone Canft make our wifdom wife; And how unwife! how deep in guilt! How infamous the fault! "A teacher thron'd in pomp of words, "Indeed, beneath the taught !" VOL. III. L * Page 87. Means Means moft infallible to make The world an infidel; And, with inftructions moft divine, O for a clean and ardent heart, Thy praise, begun on earth, to found How cold is man? to him how hard "Which yet he-most efteems." What shall we fay, when boundless blifs Of rationals is blind? Of human nature ne'er too high ON ON THE LATE QUEEN'S DEATH, AND HIS MAJESTY'S ACCESSION TO THE THRONE. S IR, I have long, and with impatience, fought, My fame at once, and duty to pursue, And please the public, by respect to you. Though you, long fince beyond Britannia known, Know, fir, the great efteem and honour due, Then |