Page:The Amyntas of Tasso (1770) - Percival Stockdale.djvu/44

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AMYNTAS.
Shake off thy prejudice; put on the woman,
Nor be a rebel to the voice of nature.

SYLVIA.
Well, Daphne, when I hear the sighs of plants,
I frankly will consent to be a lover.

DAPHNE.
Sylvia, thy folly only can be equalled
By thy insensibility to love.
Dost thou then make advice, and argument
The ill-timed subject of insipid banter?
But go, thou foolish maid; the time will come
When thou in vain severely wilt repent
Thy inattention to my friendly lessons,
I speak not of that mortifying time
When thou shalt fly the mirror of the stream,
Where oft thy face thou viewest, and perhaps,
Unfeeling as thou art, dost oft admire it:
The time when thou shalt fly the limpid fountain,
Dreading to see the ruins of thy beauty,
The furrows of old age, thy withered hue,
Spoiled of the lily, and the rose, for ever;

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