Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 8.djvu/27

 I freely grant the thought is old: Why, then, your hero must be told, In him such virtues lie inherent, To qualify him God's vicegerent; That, with no title to inherit, He must have been a king by merit. Yet, be the fancy old or new, 'Tis partly false, and partly true: And, take it right, it means no more Than George and William claim'd before. Should some obscure inferiour fellow, Like Julius, or the Youth of Pella, When all your list of Gods is out, Presume to show his mortal snout, And as a Deity intrude, Because he had the world subdu'd; O, let him not debase your thoughts, Or name him but to tell his faults. — Of Gods I only quote the best, But you may hook in all the rest. Now, birthday bard, with joy proceed To praise your empress and her breed. First of the first, to vouch your lies, Bring all the females of the skies; The Graces, and their mistress Venus, Must venture down to entertain us: With bended knees when they adore her, What dowdies they appear before her! Nor shall we think you talk at random, For Venus might be her great-grandam: Six thousand years has liv'd the Goddess, Your heroine hardly fifty odd is. Besides, your songsters oft have shown That she has Graces of her own: