As envy pines at good possessed, So jealousy looks forth distressed On good, that seems approaching; And if success his steps attend, Discerns a rival in a friend,
And hates him for encroaching.
Hence authors of illustrious name, Unless belied by common fame, Are sadly prone to quarrel; They deem the wit a friend displays A tax upon their own just praise, And pluck each other's laurel.
A man renowned for repartee Will seldom scruple to make free With friendship's finest feeling, Will thrust a dagger at your breast, And say he wounded you in jest, By way of balm for healing.
Whoever keeps an open ear For tattlers, will be sure to hear The trumpet of contention; Aspersion is the babbler's trade, To listen is to lend him aid, And rush into dissension.
A friendship, that in frequent fits Of controversial rage emits The sparks of disputation,
Like hand-in-hand insurance plates,
Most unavoidably creates
The thought of conflagration.
Some fickle creatures boast a soul
True as a needle to the pole,
Their humour yet so various
They manifest their whole life through The needle's deviations too,
Their love is so precarious.
The great and small but rarely meet On terms of amity complete; Plebeians must surrender
And yield so much to noble folk, It is combining fire with smoke, Obscurity with splendour.
Some are so placid and serene (As Irish bogs are always green) They sleep secure from waking; And are indeed a bog, that bears Your unparticipated cares
Unmoved and without quaking.
Courtier and patriot cannot mix Their het'rogenous politics
Without an effervescence, Like that of salts with lemon juice, Which does not yet like that produce A friendly coalescence.
Religion should extinguish strife, And make a calm of human life; But friends that chance to differ On points, which God has left at large, How freely will they meet and charge! No combatants are stiffer.
To prove at last my main intent Needs no expense of argument, No cutting and contriving- Seeking a real friend we seem T'adopt the chemist's golden dream, With still less hope of thriving.
Sometimes the fault is all our own, Some blemish in due time made known By trespass or omission;
Sometimes occasion brings to light Our friend's defect long hid from sight, And even from suspicion.
Then judge yourself, and prove your man As circumspectly as you can,
And, having made election, Beware no negligence of yours, Such as a friend but ill endures, Enfeeble his affection.
That secrets are a sacred trust, That friends should be sincere and just, That constancy befits them, Are observations on the case, That savour much of common-place, And all the world admits them.
But 'tis not timber, lead, and stone, An architect requires alone,
To finish a fine building- The palace were but half complete, If he could possibly forget
The carving and the gilding.
The man that hails you Tom or Jack, And proves by thumps upon your back How he esteems your merit,
Is such a friend, that one had need Be very much his friend indeed, To pardon or to bear it.
As similarity of mind,
Or something not to be defined, First fixes our attention;
So manners decent and polite, The same we practised at first sight, Must save it from declension.
Some act upon this prudent plan, Say little, and hear all you can," Safe policy, but hateful-
So barren sands imbibe the shower, But render neither fruit nor flower, Unpleasant and ungrateful.
The man I trust, if shy to me, Shall find me as reserved as he; No subterfuge or pleading Shall win my confidence again; I will by no means entertain A spy on my proceeding.
These samples-for alas! at last These are but samples, and a taste Of evils yet unmentioned- May prove the task a task indeed, In which 'tis much if we succeed, However well-intentioned.
Pursue the search, and you will find Good sense and knowledge of mankind To be at least expedient, And, after summing all the rest, Religion ruling in the breast A principal ingredient.
The noblest Friendship ever shown The Saviour's history makes known, Though some have turned and turned it; And whether being crazed or blind, Or seeking with a biassed mind, Have not, it seems discerned it.
O Friendship, if my soul forego Thy dear delights while here below; To mortify and grieve me, May I myself at last appear Unworthy, base, and insincere, Or may my friend deceive me!
BLINDED in youth by Satan's arts, The world to our unpractised hearts A flattering prospect shows; Our fancy forms a thousand schemes Of gay delights, and golden dreams, And undisturbed repose.
So in the desert's dreary waste, By magic power produced in haste, (As ancient fables say)
Castles, and groves, and music sweet, The senses of the traveller meet, And stop him in his way.
But while he listens with surprise, The charm dissolves, the vision dies, 'Twas but enchanted ground: Thus if the Lord our spirit touch, The world, which promised us so much, A wilderness is found.
At first we start and feel distressed, Convinced we never can have rest In such a wretched place
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