When I am number'd with the dead, And all my pious gifts are read, By heav'n and earth 'twill then be known An Angel came. Ah friend, he cry'd, Prove your intention is fincere: This inftant give a hundred pound; But why such hafte, the fick Man whines, Perhaps Perhaps I may recover ftill. That fum and more are in my will. Fool, fays the Vision, now 'tis plain, Your life, your foul, your heav'n was gain; By giving what is not your own. While there is life, there's hope, he cry'd; Then why fuch hafte? fo groan'd and dy’d. FABLE 11 Kent inv. P.Pourdrinier scul I FABLE XXVIII. The PERSIAN, the SUN and the CLOUD. S there a bard whom genius fires, Whofe ev'ry thought the God inspires? When Envy reads the nervous lines, She frets, the rails, the raves, fhe pines, Her hiffing fnakes with venom fwell, She calls her venal train from hell, The fervile fiends her nod obey, And all Curl's authors are in pay. Fame calls up calumny and spite. As proftrate to the God of day With heart devout a Perfian lay; His invocation thus begun. Parent of light, all-seeing Sun, Prolific beam, whose rays difpenfe The various gifts of Providence, Accept our praife, our daily prayer, Smile on our fields and blefs the year. A Cloud, who mock'd his grateful tongue, The day with fudden darkness hung, With pride and envy fwell'd, aloud A voice thus thunder'd from the cloud. Weak is this gawdy God of thine, Whom I at will forbid to fhine; Shall I nor vows, nor incenfe know? Where praise is due, the praise bestow. It was that God, who claims my prayer, Who gave thee birth and rais'd thee there: When o'er his beams the veil is thrown Thy substance is but plainer shown. A paffing gale, a puff of wind The gale arofe; the vapor toft (The sport of winds) in air was loft; The glorious orb the day refines. Thus Envy breaks, thus Merit fhines. |