Page:Papers on Literature and Art (Fuller).djvu/124

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108
PAPERS ON LITERATURE AND ART.

elected Cardinals, and of a purer church; and it shall be ere long remembered as dream and fable, that the representative of “my Cid” could not rest in consecrated ground.


    As if they saw their dangers, and their glories,
    And did partake with them in their rewards,
    All that have any spark of Roman in them,
    The slothful arts laid by, contend to be
    Like those they see presented.
    Second Senator. He has put
    The consuls to their whisper.
    Paris. But ’tis urged
    That we corrupt youth, and traduce superiors.
    When do we bring a vice upon the stage,
    That does go off unpunished? Do we teach,
    By the success of wicked undertakings,
    Others to tread in their forbidden steps?
    We show no arts of Lydian panderism,
    Corinthian poisons, Persian flatteries,
    But mulcted so in the conclusion, that
    Even those spectators, that were so inclined,
    Go home changed men. And for traducing such
    That are above us, publishing to the world
    Their secret crimes, we are as innocent
    As such as are born dumb. When we present
    An heir, that does conspire against the life
    Of his dear parent, numbering every hour
    He lives, as tedious to him; if there be
    Among the auditors one, whose conscience tells him
    He is of the same mould,—We cannot help it.
    Or, bringing on the stage a loose adulteress,
    That does maintain the riotous expense
    Of her licentious paramour, yet suffers
    The lawful pledges of a former bed
    To starve the while for hunger; if a matron,
    However great in fortune, birth, or titles,
    Cry out, ’Tis writ for me!—We cannot help it.
    Or, when a covetous man’s expressed, whose wealth