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1667–1745

HORACE, BOOK IV, ODE IX

Jonathan Swift

Virtue conceal'd within our breast Is inactivity at best: But never shall the Muse endure To let your virtues lie obscure;

Or suffer Envy to conceal Your labours for the public weal. Within your breast all wisdom lies, Either to govern or advise;

Your steady soul preserves her frame, In good and evil times, the same. Pale Avarice and lurking Fraud, Stand in your sacred presence awed;

Your hand alone from gold abstains, Which drags the slavish world in chains. Him for a happy man I own, Whose fortune is not overgrown;

And happy he who wisely knows To use the gifts that Heaven bestows; Or, if it please the powers divine, Can suffer want and not repine.

The man who infamy to shun Into the arms of death would run; That man is ready to defend, With life, his country or his friend.

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HORACE, BOOK IV, ODE IX · Jonathan Swift · Poetry Cove