Poems 2

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Poems 2
Crabbe George
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^^Jane borrowed maxims from a doubting school, ^^ And took for truth the test of ridicule ; " Lucy saw no such virtue in a jest : "Truth was with her of ridicule a test.
" They loved each other with the warmth of youth, " With ardour, candour, tenderness, and truth ; "And, though their pleasures were not just the same, "Yet both were plesused whenever one became ^ "Nay, each would rather in the a£t rejoice, 190 " That was th' adopted, not the native choice.
"Each had a friend, and friends to mi
...nds so fond "And good are soon united in the bond; "Each had a lover; but it seem*d that fiite "Decreed that these should not approximate.
"Now Lucy's lover was a prudent swain, " And thought, in all things, what would be his gain ; "The younger sister first engaged his view, "But with her beauty he her spirit knew; "Her fince he much admired, ^but, put the case,* too "Said he, ^I marry, what is then a fiice?
"*At first it pleases to have drawn the lot; "^He then forgets it, but his wife does not; "*Jane too,' he judged, 'would be reserved and nice, "'And many lovers had enhanced her price.' "Thus thinking much, but hiding what he thought, "The prudent lover Lucy's favour sought, "And he succeeded — she was free from art, "And his appear'd a gentle guileless heart; ' " Such she r^petted ; true, her sister found no "His placid face too ruddy and too round, "Too cold and inexpressive; such a fiice "Where you could nothing mark'd or manlv trace.


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