From Salmacis' pernicious stream If but one moment there you stay Too dear you'll for your bathing Depart nor man, nor woman, but a Disgracing both, a loath'd Hermaph EURIPIDES. THIS is true liberty, when freeborn Having t'advise the public may spea Which he who can, and will, deserves Who neither can nor will, may hold What can be a juster in a state than VIRGIL. No eastern nation ever did adore The majesty of sovereign princes mo VIRGIL. AND Britons interwove held the purp KING decides great things. d better oft than earnest can. SOPHOCLES. at say it, not I. You do the deeds, ngodly deeds find me the words. SENECA. HERE can be slain e to God more acceptable, njust and wicked king. TERENCE. now and with attention wait, ay know what th' Eunuch has to prate. HOMER. , in Lycia we're ador'd as gods, kes 'twixt us and others so great odds? 196 MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. EPIGRAM ON SALMASIUS'S HUNDREDA. WHO taught Salmasius, that French chattering ON THE NEW FORCERS OF CONSCIENCE BECAUSE you have thrown off your Prelate Lord, From them whose sin ye envied, not abhorr❜d, Dare ye for this adjure the civil sword To force our consciences that Christ set free, *The note of Warton on this sonnet appears to me to be extremely unjust and severe. Milton denoted his indigna tion against the Presbyterians because they had deserted their own principles, continued many of the supposed abuses, and usurped much of the power of the church which they had overthrown in fact, the new Presbyter was more tyrannical than the old priest. 5 polemical writer of the times, named ' Adam the notes of Warton and Todd. Rotherford Chief Commissioners of the Church of Scotwith the Assembly at Westminster. He was ivinity in the University of St. Andrew's; wrote stic tracts; and was an avowed enemy of the T. Edwards had attacked Milton's Plan of in his Antapologia, 1644. On Rotherford. ife of I. Taylor, ii. 203. the MS. the lines stand thus: e as close as marginal P -'s ears;—that is, arton. e. spare. Warton. Thou with fresh hope the lover's l While the jolly hours lead on pro Thy liquid notes that close the eye First heard before the shallow cu Portend success in love; O if Jo Have link'd that amorous power to Now timely sing, ere the rude bird Foretell my hopeless doom in some As thou from year to year hast su For my relief, yet hadst no reason w Whether the Muse, or Love call th Both them I serve, and of their tr |