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ON THE FOLLY OF VINDICTIVENESS.

FROM

THE 13th SATIRE OF JUVENAL. (174.)

"Nulla ne perjuri capitis fraudisque nefandæ
Pœna erit?" &c.

"What! shall the perjured wretch no suffering pay
"For his foul crime?"———Suppose him dragged away
In heaviest chains: suppose the power to kill
(Could anger ask aught more?) lay in your will:
Yet still the loss you mourn for, would remain;
Nor would you your embezzled gold regain.——
"But let him suffer for it!—then my mind
"Some consolation for its loss may find:
"His guilty blood is what I wish to see:
"Revenge is sweet—sweeter than life to me!"——
Why thus th' unlearned talk, whose anger springs
Ofttimes for nought, ofttimes for trifling things;
Whom every cross, however frivolous,
Supplies with phrensy's fuel. 'Tis not thus
Chrysippus teaches thee. Wise Thales felt
Not thus;—nor he the good old man, who dwelt
Near sweet Hymettus; whom it would have pain'd
To see the hemlock, which he drank while chain'd,
Shared by his own accuser. By degrees