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Epilogue to Agamemnon

Our bard, to modern epilogue a foe,

Thinks such mean mirth but deadens generous woe;

Dispels in idle air the moral sigh,

And wipes the tender tear from Pity's eye:

No more with social warmth the bosom burns;

But all the unfeeling selfish man returns.

Thus he began:—And you approved the strain;

Till the next couplet sunk to light and vain.

You check'd him there.—To you, to reason just,

He owns he triumph'd in your kind disgust.

Charm'd by your frown, by your displeasure graced,

He hails the rising virtue of your taste.

Wide will its influence spread as soon as known:

Truth, to be loved, needs only to be shown.

Confirm it, once, the fashion to be good: (Since fashion leads the fool, and awes the rude) No petulance shall wound the public ear;

No hand applaud what honour shuns to hear:

No painful blush the modest cheek shall stain;

The worthy breast shall heave with no disdain.

Chastised to decency, the British stage Shall oft invite the fair, invite the sage:

Both shall attend well pleased, well pleased depart;

Or if they doom the verse, absolve the heart.

Thomson observes, "Another epilogue was spoken after the first representation of the play, which began with the first six lines of this; but the rest of that epilogue having been very justly disliked by the audience, this was substituted in its place."

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James Thomson

James Thomson (c. 11 September 1700 – 27 August 1748) was a Scottish poet and playwright, known for his poems The Seasons and The Castle of Indo…

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