. British theatre . purely flows From ihinds in joy or undisturbed repose. Shall w€ behold eac^faee with pleasure glow. Unthankful to the arms that made them soi Shall we not say— Old Englisli honour now revives again Uf^nir ably fatal to the pride ofSpain^ 134 EPILOGUE. Bin hold While Anne repeats the vevgeance of Elizas reign!For to the glorious conduct sure that drewA Senates grateful vote our adorations dueiFrom that alone all other thanks are pcor^Tho old triumphing Romans askd no more^And Rome indeed gave all within its your superior stars., that know too wellYou English heroes
. British theatre . purely flows From ihinds in joy or undisturbed repose. Shall w€ behold eac^faee with pleasure glow. Unthankful to the arms that made them soi Shall we not say— Old Englisli honour now revives again Uf^nir ably fatal to the pride ofSpain^ 134 EPILOGUE. Bin hold While Anne repeats the vevgeance of Elizas reign!For to the glorious conduct sure that drewA Senates grateful vote our adorations dueiFrom that alone all other thanks are pcor^Tho old triumphing Romans askd no more^And Rome indeed gave all within its your superior stars., that know too wellYou English heroes should old Romes excel,T^o crown your arms beyond the bribes of spoilRaised English beauty to reward your toil:Tho seized of all the rifled world had lostSo fair u circle [To the Boxes] Rome could never ^ auspicious Chiefs ! infame the your conquest^ and possess the ages may record of them and youThey only could inspire what you alone could do. THE END. ArtU Xhe c {Trews,. JJeWUdt^inxf^ 3f/E .y TMsr as Lad wFx, wr s-jicn. LonilorLlliatecHir Kritjih Lil>rai-y The Discovery is rather a novel than a comedy¥• —it has no incident that can surprise, and the dia-logue is languid, and the sentences l
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1700, bookdecade1790, bookidbritishtheat, bookyear1791