The BASTARD. A POEM.
BY Mr. RICHARD SAVAGE.
THE BASTARD. A POEM, Inſcribed with all due Reverence to Mrs. BRET, once Coun⯑teſs of MACCLESFIELD.
By RICHARD SAVAGE, Son of the late Earl RIVERS
DUBLIN: Printed by S. POWELL, for T. BENSON, at Shakeſpear's Head, in Caſtle-ſtreet, and P. CRAMPTON, at Addiſon's Head, oppoſite to the Horſe-guard in Dame's-ſtreet, 1728.
The PREFACE.
[]THE Reader will eaſily perceive theſe Verſes were begun, when my Heart was gayer, than it has been of late; and finiſh'd in Hours of the deepeſt Melancholy.
I hope the World will do me the Juſtice to be⯑lieve, that no part of this flows from any real Anger againſt the Lady, to whom it is inſcrib'd. Whatever undeſerv'd Severities I may have re⯑ceiv'd at her Hands, wou'd ſhe deal ſo candidly as to acknowledge Truth, ſhe very well knows, by an Experience of many Years, that I have ever behaved myſelf towards her, like one, who thought it his Duty to ſupport with Patience all Afflictions from that Quarter. Indeed if I had not been capable of forgiving a Mother, I muſt have bluſh'd to receive Pardon myſelf at the Hands of my Sovereign.
Neither to ſay Truth, were the manner of my Birth All, ſhou'd I have any Reaſon from com⯑plaint—when I am a little diſpoſed to a gay turn of Thinking, I conſider, as I was a De-relict from my Cradle, I have the Honour of a lawful Claim to the beſt Protection in Europe. For being a Spot of Earth, to which no body pre⯑tends a Title, I devolve naturally upon the KING, as one of the Rights of his Royalty.
[] While I preſume to name his MAJESTY, I look back, with Confuſion, upon the Mercy I have lately experienc'd, becauſe it is impoſſible to remember it, but with ſomething I would fain forget; for the ſake of my future Peace, and Alleviation of my paſt Misfortune.
I owe my Life to the Royal Pity, if a Wretch can, with Propriety, be ſaid to live, whoſe Days are fewer than his Sorrows; and to whom Death had been but a Redemption from Miſery.
But I will ſuffer my Pardon, as my Puniſh⯑ment, till that Life, which has ſo graciouſly been given me, ſhall become conſiderable enough not to be uſeleſs in his Service, to whom it was for⯑feited.
Under Influence of theſe Sentiments, with which his MAJESTY's great Goodneſs has in⯑ſpired me, I conſider my Loſs of Fortune, and Dignity, as my Happineſs; to which, as I was born without Ambition, I am thrown from them without repining.—Poſſeſſing thoſe Advanta⯑ges, my Care had been, perhaps, but how to enjoy Life; by the want of them I am taught this nobler Leſſon, to ſtudy how to deſerve it.
Appendix A Books, Poems and Plays, Printed for, and Sold by P. Crampton at Addiſon's Head oppoſite to the Horſe-guard in Dame's-ſtreet, and T. Benſon at Shakeſpear's Head in Caſtle-ſtreet.
[]- THE Travels of Cyrus, in a neat Pocket Volume, Paice bound a Britiſh Half Crown.
- An Eſſay on the Paſſions and Affections, with Illuſtrati⯑ons on the Moral Senſe. By Mr. Francis Hutcheſon, Au⯑thor of the Enquiry into the Original of our Ideas of Beau⯑ty and Virtue. Price bound two Shillings and two Pence.
- A Select Collection of Tracts, by Walter Moyle, Eſq viz. 1. An Eſſay upon the Roman Government. 2. Re⯑marks upon D [...]. Prideaux's Connection of the Old and New Teſtament. 3. An Eſſay upon the Lacaedemo nian Government. 4. An Argument againſt a ſtanding Army. Price bound a Britiſh Half Crown.
- Shadwell's Works, conſiſting of all his Plays and Poems. Price bound four Shillings and four Pence.
- The Orphan. Price a Britiſh Six-pence.
- Caius Marius. Price Ditto.
- Lucius Junius Brutus, Father of his Country. Price Ditto.
- The Spaniſh Fryar. Price Ditto.
- The Double Falſhood. Price Ditto.
- The Miſer turn'd Courtier. Price four Pence.
- The Art of Shooting Flying. Price two Pence.
- The Norfolk Steward. Price two Pence.
- The Baſon a Poem. Price a Penny.
- A Ballad upon the Ruffs. Price a Penny.
- Juſt publiſh'd, Cyrus a Tragedy.
- Zitationsvorschlag für dieses Objekt
- TextGrid Repository (2020). TEI. 5416 The bastard A poem inscribed with all due reverence to Mrs Bret once Countess of Macclesfield By Richard Savage son of the late Earl Rivers. University of Oxford Text Archive. . https://hdl.handle.net/21.T11991/0000-001A-61A4-D