Page:The Amyntas of Tasso (1770) - Percival Stockdale.djvu/102

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70
AMYNTAS.
He lounges not, but waits for an occasion;
Haply at last his prudence finds a maid
Whose heart, susceptible, and sympathetick,
In concord sweet revibrates to his own.
Thus does the wary connoisseur in love,
Taste all it's joys, and all it's pains elude;
He scapes the prickles of the flower; he crops
Nought but the sweets of that Arabian rose.

DAPHNE.
Man loves activity, and enterprize:
The sweet unseasoned with a dash of bitter
Is soon succeeded by satiety.

THYRSIS.
I rather would be satiate than oft stung
With an inordinate and painful craving.

DAPHNE.
Not surely if you have a high regale:
And if that high regale, when 'tis enjoyed,
Impresses an Elysium on the memory,
Raising the joy of every repetition.

THYR-