A JUBILEE is but a spiritual fair, T'expofe to fale all forts of impious ware, In which his Holiness buys nothing in, To stock his magazines, but deadly fin, And deals in extraordinary crimes,
That are not vendible at other times
For, dealing both for Judas and th' high-priest, He maks a plentifuller trade of Christ.
THAT fpiritual pattern of the church, the ark, In which the ancient world did once imbark, Had ne'er a helm in 't to direct its way, Although bound through an univerfal fea; When all the modern church of Rome's concern Is nothing else but in the helm and stern.
IN the church of Rome to go to shrift, Is but to put the foul on a clean shift,
AN afs will with his long ears fray The flies, that tickle him, away; But man delights to have his ears Blown maggots in by flatterers.
ALL wit does but divert men from the road In which things vulgarly are understood, And force Miftake and Ignorance to own A better fenfe than commonly is known.
IN little trades, more cheats and lying Are us'd in felling than in buying; But in the great, unjuster dealing Is us'd in buying than in selling.
ALL fmatterers are more brisk and pert Than those that understand an art; As little sparkles shine more bright Than glowing coals, that give them light.
LAW does not put the least restraint Upon our freedom, but maintain 't; Or, if it does, 'tis for our good, To give us freer latitude :
For wholesome laws preserve us free, By ftinting of our liberty.
THE world has long endeavour'd to reduce Those things to practice that are of no use ; And strives to practise things of speculation, And bring the practical to contemplation; And by that error renders both in vain, By forcing Nature's courfe againft the grain.
IN all the world there is no vice
Lefs prone t' excess than avarice;
It neither cares for food nor cloathing :
Nature's content with little, that with nothing.
IN Rome no temple was fo low As that of Honour, built to show How humble honour ought to be, Though there 'twas all authority.
IT is a harder thing for men to rate Their own parts at an equal estimate,
Than cast up fractions, in th' accompt of heaven, Of time and motion, and adjust them even; For modest persons never had a true
Particular of all that is their due.
SOME people's fortunes, like a weft or stray, Are only gain'd by lofing of their
AS he that makes his mark is understood To write his name, and 'tis in law as good; So he that cannot write one word of sense, Believes he has as legal a pretence
To fcribble what he does not understand, As idiots have a title to their land.
WERE Tully now alive, he 'd be to feek In all our Latin terms of art and Greek; Would never understand one word of fenfe The most irrefragable schoolman means : As if the fchools defign'd their terms of art Not to advance a fcience, but divert ; As Hocus Pocus conjures, to amufe The rabble from obferving what he does.
AS 'tis a greater mystery, in the art Of painting, to foreshorten any part Than draw it out; fo 'tis in books the chief Of all perfections to be plain and brief.
THE man that for his profit 's bought t' obey, Is only hir'd, on liking, to betray; And, when he 's bid a liberaller price, Will not be fluggish in the work, nor nice.
OPINIATORS naturally differ
From other men ; as wooden legs are stiffer Than thofe of pliant joints, to yield and bow, Which way foe'er they are design'd to go.
NAVIGATION, that withstood The mortal fury of the Flood, And prov'd the only means to fave All earthly creatures from the wave, Has, for it, taught the fea and wind To lay a tribute on mankind, That, by degrees, has fwallow'd more Than all it drown'd at once before.
THE prince of Syracuse, whose destin'd fate It was to keep a school and rule a state, Found that his fceptre never was fo aw'd, As when it was tranflated to a rod;
And that his fubjects ne'er were fo obedient, As when he was inaugurated pedanta
For to inftruct is greater than to rule,
And no command 's fo' imperious as a school.
AS he whofe destiny does prove To dangle in the air above, Does lose his life for want of air, That only fell to be his share; So he whom Fate at once defign'd To plenty and a wretched mind, Is but condemn'd t' a rich distress, And ftarves with niggardly excefs.
THE univerfal medicine is a trick, That Nature never meant, to cure the fick Unless by death, the fingular receipt, To root out all difeafes by the great : For univerfals deal in no one part Of Nature, nor particulars of Art;
And therefore that French quack that fet up phyfic, Call'd his receipt a General Specific. For, though in mortal poisons every one
Is mortal universally alone,
Yet Nature never made an antidote
To cure them all as eafy as they 're got; Much lefs, among so many variations Of different maladies and complications, Make all the contrarieties in Nature Submit themselves t' an equal moderator.
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