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That this to all be prospered is our prayer;

Patrons of noble arts and judges fair,

We are to act a play, a Latin one,

By Tully witnessed and by Roscius done,

The work of Terence ; with such names as these

To recommend us, we must surely please.

I called it Latin, I was partly wrong;

No doubt the verses to that tongue belong;

But incidents and thought are purely Greek,

The Latin part is but the words we speak.

For just as that we call an English play

Is what some Frenchman clever in that way

Has made before ; so Romans thought no shame

To take from Greece and publish in their name.

What use, then, now to offer you a play

Not even native and long past its day,

A scenic outh'ne when in Greek 't was made,

And now a faded shadow of that shade?

Because while ages keep their steady pace,

The aims and nature of the human race

Continue still the same ; their fear and woe,

Their joys and their desires, no changes show.

The Latin that we speak in Grecian dress

Mirrors the nature of our age no less.

Only the outward acts and garb are old,

The rest is fresh as when 't was first unrolled.—