Page:Vida's Art of Poetry.djvu/121

 When the proud victor on his conquest smiles, And safe enjoys the triumph of his toils; Let him by timely diffidence be aw'd, Nor trust too soon th' unpolisht piece abroad. Oh! may his rash ambition ne'er inflame His breast, with such a dang'rous thirst of fame. But let the terror of disgrace controul The warm, the partial fondness of the soul; And force the bard to throw his passion by, Nor view his off-spring with a parent's eye; 'Till his affections are by justice crost, And all the father in the judge is lost. He seeks his friends, nor trusts himself alone, But asks their judgment, and resigns his own; Begs them, with urgent pray'rs, to be sincere, Just, and exact, and rigidly severe; Due verdict to pronounce on ev'ry thought, Nor spare the slightest shadow of a fault; But, bent against himself, and strictly nice, He thanks each critick that detects a vice; Tho' charg'd with what his judgment can defend, He joins the partial sentence of his friend. The