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TO VIRGIL.

Horace

What shame or bound can there be to our affectionate regret for so dear

a person? O Melpomene, on whom your father has bestowed a clear voice

and the harp, teach me the mournful strains. Does then perpetual sleep

oppress Quinctilius? To whom when will modesty, and uncorrupt faith the

sister of Justice, and undisguised truth, find any equal? He died

lamented by many good men, but more lamented by none than by you, my

Virgil. You, though pious, alas! in vain demand Quinctilius back from

the gods, who did not lend him to us on such terms. What, though you

could strike the lyre, listened to by the trees, with more sweetness

than the Thracian Orpheus; yet the blood can never return to the empty

shade, which Mercury, inexorable to reverse the fates, has with his

dreadful Caduceus once driven to the gloomy throng. This is hard: but

what it is out of our power to amend, becomes more supportable by

patience.

 

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