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I must be happy, sure, when I return.
Whoever hopes true happiness to see,
Hopes for what never was, nor e'er will be:
The nearest ease, since we must suffer still,
Are they who dare be patient under ill.

Whilom a fool saw where a fiddle lay;
And after poring round it, strove to play :
Above, below, across, all ways he tries;
He tries in vain, 'tis discord all and noise:
Fretting he threw it by: then thus 'the lout;
"There's music in it, could I fetch it out."
If life does not its harmony impart,

We want not instruments, but have not art.
'Tis endless to defer our hopes of ease,
Till crosses end, and disappointments cease.
The sage is happy, not that all goes right,
His cattle feel no rot, his corn no blight;

The mind for ease is fitted to the wise,

Not so the fool's-'tis here the difference lies;

Their prospect is the same, but various are their

eyes.

EPISTLE IV.

THE

DUTY OF EMPLOYING ONE'S SELF.

By the Same.

FEW people know it, yet, dear sir, 'tis true,
Man should have somewhat evermore to do.
Hard labor's tedious, every one must own;
But surely better such by far, than none;
The perfect drone, the quite impertinent,
Whose life at nothing aims, but—to be spent ; ́
Such Heaven visits for some mighty ill:
'Tis sure the hardest labour, to sit still.
Hence that unhappy tribe who nought pursue :
Who sin, for want of something else to do.

Sir John is bless'd with riches, honor, love; And to be bless'd indeed, needs only move. For want of this, with pain he lives away, A lump of hardly-animated clay : Dull 'till his double bottle does him right; He's easy just at twelve o'clock at night. Thus for one sparkling hour alone he 's blest; While spleen and head-ach seize on all the rest.

What numbers, sloth with gloomy humors fills!
Racking their brains with visionary ills.

Hence what loud outcries, and well-meaning rage,
What endless quarrels at the present age!

How many blame! how often may we hear,

"Such vice!-well, sure, the last day must be near!"' T'avoid such wild, imaginary pains,

The sad creation of distemper'd brains,

Dispatch, dear friend! move, labour, sweat, run, fly! Do aught but think the day of judgment nigh.

There are, who've lost all relish for delight :
With them no earthly thing is ever right.
T'expect to alter to their taste, were vain;
For who can mend so fast, as they complain?
Whate'er you do, shall be a crime with such;
One while you've lost your tongue, then talk too
much :

Thus shall you meet their waspish censure still.;
As hedge-hogs prick you, go which side you will.
Oh! pity these whene'er you see them swell!
Folks call 'em cross-poor men! they are not well.
How many such, in indolence grown old,
With vigor ne'er do any thing, but scold?
Who spirits only from ill-humor get;
Like wines that die, unless upon the fret.

Weary of flouncing to himself alone,
Acerbus keeps a man to fret upon.
The fellow's nothing on the earth to do,

But to sit quiet and be scolded to.

Pishes and oaths, whene'er the master's sour'd,
All largely on the scape-goat slave are pour'd.
This drains his rage; and though to John so rough,
Abroad you'd think him complaisant enough.

As for myself, whom poverty prevents
From being angry at so great expence ;
Who, should I ever be inclin'd to rage,
For want of slaves, war with myself must wage,
Must rail, and hear; chastising, be chastis'd;
Be both the tyrant, and the tyranniz'd;
I choose to labor, rather than to fret:
What's rage in some, in me goes off in sweat.
If times are ill, and things seem never worse;
Men, manners to reclaim,-I take my horse.
One mile reforms 'em, or if aught remain
Unpurg'd, 'tis but to ride as far again.
Thus on myself in toils I spend my rage:
I pay the fine; and that absolves the age.

Sometimes, still more to interrupt my ease,
I take my pen, and write such things as these:
Which though all other merit be deny'd,
Shew my devotion still to me employ'd.
Add too, though writing be itself a curse,
Yet some distempers are a cure for worse;
And since 'midst indolence, spleen will prevail,
Since who do nothing else are sure to rail;

Man should be suffer'd thus to play the fool,
To keep from hurt, as children go to school.

You should not rhyme in spite of nature !-True; Yet sure 'tis greater trouble, if you do : And if 'tis lab'ring only, men profess,

Who writes the hardest, writes with most success.

Thus for myself and friends, I do my part;
Promoting doubly the pains-taking art :
First to myself, 'tis labor to compose;
To read such lines, is drudgery to those.

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