Page:The Remains of Hesiod the Ascraean, including the Shield of Hercules - Elton (1815).djvu/125

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
WORKS.
43
Or thou in other sort may'st well dispense
Wine-offerings and the smoke of frankincense,
Ere on the nightly couch thy limbs be laid;
Or when the stars from sacred sun-rise fade.
So shall thy piety accepted move
Their heavenly natures to propitious love:
Ne'er shall thy heritage divided be,
But others part their heritage to thee.
Let friends oft bidden to thy feast repair;
Let not a foe the social moment share.
Chief to thy open board the neighbour call:
When, unforeseen, domestic troubles fall,
The neighbour runs ungirded; kinsmen wait,
And, lingering for their raiment, hasten late.
As the good neighbour is our prop and stay,
So is the bad a pit-fall in our way.
Thus blest or curs'd, we this or that obtain,
The first a blessing and the last a bane.
How should thine ox by chance untimely die?
The evil neighbour looks and passes by.
If aught thou borrowest,[1] well the measure weigh;
The same good measure to thy friend repay,

  1. If aught thou borrowest.] Lend to thy neighbour in time of his need, and pay thou thy neighbour again in due season.