Such were the storms good Sancroft long has born ; The mitre, which his sacred head has worn, Was, like his Master's Crown, inwreath'd with thorn. Death's sting is swallow'd up in victory at last, The bitter cup is from him past : Fortune in both extremes Yet to firm heavenly minds, seen, Confesses ignorance to judge between; And must to human reasoning opposite conclude, To point out which is moderation, which is fortitude. XI. Thus Sancroft, in the exaltation of retreat, Short glimm'rings of the prelate glorified; Which the disguise of greatness only served to hide. To lodge behind a golden cloud; appears so gay, 'Tis but a lowborn vapour kindled by a way; At length 'tis overblown and past, Puff’d by the people's spightful blast, The dazzling glory dims their prostituted sight, No deflowered eye can face the naked light : Yet 1 Yet does this high perfection well proceed From strength of its own native seed, of old, improve, There are degrees above I know As well as here below, Sit clad in lawn of purer woven day, be given, here, XII. Since, happy saint, since it has been of late Either our blindness or our fate, To lose the providence of thy cares, That begs the pow'rful blessing of thy pray’rs. Say whate their senseless malice meant, To tear religion's lovely face : Religion Religion now does on her death-bed lie, Heart-sick of a high fever and consuming atrophy; How the physicians swarm to show their mortal skill, And by their college arts methodically kill : Reformers and physicians differ but in name, One end in both, and the design the same; Is but the patient's death, and gain- Or a more worthy subject choose : Nor be thy mighty spirit rais’d, VIRTUE, the greatest of all monarchies ! Till, its first emperor, rebellious man, Depos’d from off his seat, By many a petty lord possess’d, Tis you who must this land subdue, Where none ever led the way, Like the philosopher's stone, We have too long been led astray ; With rules from musty morals brought, With antique relics of the dead, And we, the bubbled fools, III. We oddly Plato's paradox make good, Stale memorandums of the schools : Think that she there does all her treasures hide, And that her troubled ghost still haunts there since she died. Her priest, her train, and followers show Affect ill-manner'd pedantry, And, sick with dregs and knowledge grown, Which greedily they swallow down, Still cast it up, and nauseate company. IV. Curst be the wretch! nay doubly curst! (If it may lawful be To curse our greatest enemy) Who learn'd himself that heresy first (Which since has seiz'd on all the rest) That knowledge forfeits all humanity; Taught us, like Spaniards, to be proud and poor, And fling our scraps before our door! grown. Borrow from every one a grace; Their courting a retreat like you, Unless I put in Cæsar's learning too: Your |