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On the Refurrection.

From ev'ry Corner of th' extended Earth,
The fcatter'd Duit is call'd to fecond Birth;
The fever'd Body now unites again,
And kindred Atoms rally into Men,

The various Joints refume their antient Seats,
And ev'ry Limb its former Task repeats.

On Youth.

Fragrant the Rofe is, but it fades in time;
The Violet sweet, but quickly past the Prime;
White Lilies hang their Heads, and foon decay;
And whiter Snow in Minutes melts away:
Such and fo with'ring are our early loys,
Which Time, or Sickness, fpeedily deftroys.

The Duty of Man.

First to our God, we muft with Rev'rence bow,
The fecond Honour to our Prince we awe;
Next to Wives, Parents, Children, fit Refpect,
And to our Friends and Kindred we direct

Then we must thofe, who groan beneath the Weight
Of Age, Disease, or Want, commiferate.

The Defire.

From my Beginning, may th'Almighty Powers,
Bleffings beftow in never-cealing Showers;
Oh! may I happy be, and always bleft!
Of ev'ry Joy, of ev'ry Wifh poffefs'd!
May Plenty diffipate all worldly Cares,
And smiling Peace blefs my revolving Years!

On Mortality.

From ftately Palaces we muft remove,
The narrow Lodgings of a Grave to prove
Leave the fair Train, and the light gilded Room,
To lie alone benighted in the Tomb.
God only is Immortal; Man not fo:

to be paid upon Demand, we owe.

On

On boneft Labour.

Go to the Plough or Team; Go Hedge or Ditch,
Some honeft Calling ufe, no matter which;
Be Porter, Poftman, take the lab'ring Qar;
Employment keeps the Bailifts from the Door:
Though thou be mean, thy frugal Industry,
Depend upon it, fhall rewarded be.

On Heaven.

Heaven is our Guard, and Innocence its Care,
Nor need the Just the worst of Dangers fear:
It pities the defenfelefs poor Man's Grief,
And fends him, when he calls, Help and Relief:
Its Arm, the fureft Succour, and the beft,
Delivers and revenges the Diftrefs'd.

On an Active Life:

Happy is he, the only happy Man,
Who out of Choice, does all the Good he can j
Who Business loves, and others better makes,
By prudent Industry, and Pains he takes :

God's Bleffing here he'll have, and Man's Efteem,
And, when he dies, his Works will follow him.

Misfortunes Advantageous.

In all Misfortunes, this Advantage lies,
They make us humble, and they make us wife:
Let's bear it calmly, tho' a grievous Woe,
And still adore the Hand that gives the Blow;
And he that can acquire fuch Virtue, gains
An ample Recompenfe for all his Pains.

On CHRIST our Life.

I am the Refurrection, faith the Lord;
Eternal Life's the Fruit of my eternal Word;
Whoever firmly does in me believe,

The Grave fhall not confine, nor Hell receive :
Nor only this; but thofe, that will rely

On what I teach, fhall never never

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On King GEORGE.

Long may the King Great Britain's Scepter fway,
While all his Subjects peaceably obey:

And when God's Providence hall him remove
From thefe below, to highest Realms above;
To his own Race, may he the Crown refign,
For ever to continue in that Line.

On the Scripture.

Let facred Writings always be admir'd,
Whofe holy Penmen truly were infpir'd;
Through all fucceeding Times, both worst and beft,
They have run down, and born the ftrictest Test.
A Spirit there, in ev'ry Line we see,
Of Hope, Love, Joy, and Immortality.

On a Competency.

Let me, O God, my Labours fo employ,
That I a Competency may enjoy;

I afk no more, than my Life's Wants fupply,
And leave their Due to others when I die;
If this thou grant (which nothing doubt I can}
None ever liv'd or dy'd a richer Man.

On the Fall of Man.

Man was by Heaven made to govern all,
But how unfit, demonftrates in his Fall;
Created pure, and with a Strength endu'd,
Of Grace divine, fufficient to have stood;
But alienate from God, he foon became
The Child of Wrath, Pride, Mifery, and Shame.

On the Sceptic.

No Providence the Sceptic will allow,

Then let th' ungrateful Mortal tell me, how
His tender Infancy Protection found,

And how his Childhood was with Safety crown'd!
How through his Youth he came to manly Years,

ugh many Dangers, which he fees and fears!

The

The Good of Evils.

One Week's Extremity may teach us more,
Than long Profperity had done before:
Death is forgotten in our eafy State,

But Troubles mind us of our final Fate:
The doing ill, affects us not with Fears,

But fuff'ring ill, brings Sorrow, Woe, and Tears.

On Lying.

On all Occfions to declare the Truth,
Is moft Praise-worthy in a virtuous Youth:
A Fault extenuated by a Lye,

Is doubled in Reality thereby:

And he that to this Vice becomes a Slave,
In Fire and Brimftone fhall his Portion have.

On Fore-Thought.

Rafhness and Hafte make all Things unfecure; All great Concernments muft Delays endure: Think on the Means, the Manner and the End, When any great Defign thou doft intend; And if uncertain thy Pretenfions be, Stay till fit Time wears out Uncertainty.

On the PARLIAMENT.

See Britain's King upon his awful Throne, Striving to make each Subject's Heart his own; By Justice ruling, but with Mercy mixt, Supporting Worhip, as by Law 'tis fixt; While Lords and Commons all as one agree, To fettle firm his Crewn and Dignity.

On Trouble.

The happiest Man, that ever breath'd on Earth,
With all the Glories of Eftare and Birth,
Had yet fome anxious Carep make him know
No Grandeur was above the reach of Woc.-
To be from all Things, that diiquiet, free,
Is not confiftent With Humanity.

On the Almighty Power.

The lofty Concave of the vaft Expanfe
Could never be th' Effect of giddy Chance;
Those beauteous and amazing Globes of Light,
No Power could make, that was not infinite;
But when He fpake, each Atom of this Frame,
From the dark Womb of empty Nothing came.

Trifle not in Devotion.

Whither thou go'ft conceive, and to what End,
When thine own Feet the Houfe of God afcend.
There rather hear his Life-directing Rules,
Than offer up the Sacrifice of Fools.

For finful are their Gifts, who neither know
What they to God should give, or what they owe

On Death.

When we have once reign'd our finful Breath,
(For we can die but once) then after Death,
Th' immortal Soul immediately goes
To endless Joys, or everlasting Woes.
Wife then's the Man, who labours to secure
His Paffage fafe, and his Reception fure.

CHRIST on the Crofs.

Ye wand'ring Travellers, that pafs this Way,
Stand ftill a while, thefe Agonies furvey:
And on refult of ferious Thoughts declare,
If ever Sorrows might with mine compare.
But GOD, in Mercy, hath decreed this Cup,
Moft willingly therefore I drink it up.

Live to Die.

You, whofe fond Wishes do to Heaven afpire,
Who make those bleft Abodes your fole Defire;
If you are wife, and hope that Elifs to gain,
Ufe well your Time, live not an Hour in vain :
Let not the Morrow your vain Thoughts employ,
But think this Day the last you fhall enjoy.

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