That thou may’st dare and suffer, soar and fall.

Beauties are tyrants, and if they can reign,

They have no feeling for their subjects’ pain:

Their victim’s anguish gives their charms applause,

And their chief glory is the woe they cause:

Something of this was felt, in spite of love,

Which hope, in spite of reason, would remove.

Thus lived our youth, with conversation, books,

And Lady Emma’s soul-subduing looks:

Lost in delight, astonish’d at his lot,