Saul (Handel and Jennens)
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Dramatis Personae
[edit]- Saul (bass)
- Merab (soprano)
- Michal (soprano)
- Jonathan (tenor)
- David (alto)
- Samuel (bass)
- High Priest (tenor)
- Witch of Endor (tenor)
- Abner (tenor)
- Amalekite (tenor)
- Doeg (bass)
- Chorus of Israelites
- Chorus
ACT ONE
[edit]1. Overture
[edit]Scene 1
[edit]An Epinicion or Song of Triumph, for the victory over Goliath and the Philistines.
2a. Chorus of Israelites
[edit]- How excellent Thy name, O Lord,
- In all the world is known!
- Above all Heav'ns, O King ador'd,
- How hast Thou set Thy glorious throne!
3. Air (soprano)
[edit]- An infant rais'd by Thy command,
- To quell Thy rebel foes,
- Could fierce Goliath's dreadful hand
- Superior in the fight oppose.
4. Trio
[edit]- Along the monster atheist strode,
- With more than human pride,
- And armies of the living God
- Exulting in his strength defied.
5. Chorus of Israelites
[edit]- The youth inspir'd by Thee, O Lord,
- With ease the boaster slew:
- Our fainting courage soon restor'd,
- And headlong drove that impious crew.
2b. Chorus of Israelites
[edit]- How excellent Thy name, O Lord,
- In all the world is known!
- Above all Heavn's, O King ador'd,
- How hast thou set Thy glorious throne!
- Hallelujah!
Scene 2
[edit]Saul, Jonathan, Merab, Michal and Abner, introducing David and the High Priest.
6. Recitative
[edit]Michal:
- He comes, he comes!
7. Air
[edit]Michal:
- O godlike youth, by all confess'd
- Of human race the pride!
- O virgin among women blest,
- Whom Heav'n ordains thy bride!
- But ah, how strong a bar I see
- Betwixt my happiness and me!
- O godlike youth. . . da capo
8. Recitative
[edit]Abner:
- Behold, O king, the brave, victorious youth,
- And in his hand the haughty giant's head.
Saul:
- Young man, whose son art thou?
David:
- The son of Jesse,
- Thy faithful servant, and a Bethlemite.
Saul:
- Return no more to Jesse; stay with me;
- And as an earnest of my future favour,
- Thou shalt espouse my daughter: small reward
- Of such desert, since to thy arm alone
- We owe our safety, peace and liberty.
9. Air
[edit]David:
- O king, your favours with delight
- I take, but must refuse your praise:
- For every pious Israelite
- To God that tribute pays.
- Through Him we put to flight our foes,
- And in His name,
- We trod them under that against us rose.
- O king. . . da capo
10. Recitative
[edit]Jonathan:
- Oh,early piety! Oh, modest merit!
- In this embrace my heart bestows itself;
- Henceforth, thou noble youth, accept my frienship,
- And Jonathan and David are but one.
11. Air
[edit]Merab:
- What abject thoughts a prince can have!
- In rank a prince, in mind a slave.
12. Recitative
[edit]Merab (aside, to Jonathan):
- Yet think on whom this honour you bestow;
- How poor in fortune, and in birth how low!
13. Air
[edit]Jonathan:
- Birth and fortune I despise!
- From virtue let my friendship rise.
(To David)
- No titles proud thy stem adorn,
- Yet born of God is nobly born,
- And of His gifts so rich thy store,
- That Ophir to thy wealth is poor.
- Birth and fortune. . . da capo
14. Recitative
[edit]High Priest:
- Go on, illustrious pair! Your great example
- Shall teach your youth to scorn the sordid world
- And set their hearts on things of real worth.
15. Air
[edit]High Priest:
- While yet thy tide of blood runs high,
- To God thy future life devote;
- Thy early vigour all apply,
- His glorious service to promote.
- So shall thy great Creator bless,
- And bid thy days serenely flow:
- So shall thy youthful happiness
- In age no diminution know.
- With sweet reflections thou shalt taste,
- Declining gently to thy tomb,
- The pleasure of good actions past,
- And hope with rapture joys to come.
16. Recitative
[edit]Saul:
- Thou, Merab, first in birth, be first in honour:
- Thine be the valiant youth, whose arm has sav'd
- Thy country from her foes.
Merab (aside):
- Oh, mean alliance!
17. Air
[edit]Merab:
- My soul rejects the thought with scorn,
- That such a boy, till now unknown,
- Of poor plebeian parents born,
- Should mix with royal blood his own!
- Though Saul's command I can't decline,
- I must prevent his low design,
- And save the honour of his line.
18. Air
[edit]Michal:
- See, with what a scornful air
- She the precious gift receives!
- Though e'er so noble, or so fair,
- She cannot merit what he gives.
19. Air
[edit]Michal:
- Ah, lovely youth, wast thou design'd
- With that proud beauty to be joined?
20. Symphony
[edit]21. Recitative
[edit]Michal:
- Already see the daughters of the land,
- In joyful dance, with instruments of music,
- Come to congratulate your victory.
Scene 3
[edit]Saul, Michal, Chorus.
22. Chorus of Israelites
[edit]- Welcome, welcome, mighty king!
- Welcome all who conquest bring!
- Welcome David, warlike boy,
- Author of our present joy!
- Saul, who hast thy thousands slain,
- Welcome to thy friends again!
- David his ten thousands slew,
- Ten thousand praises are his due!
23. Accompagnato
[edit]Saul:
- What do I hear? Am I then sunk so low,
- To have this upstart boy preferr'd before me?
24. Chorus of Israelites
[edit]- David his ten thousands slew,
- Ten thousand praises are his due!
25. Accompagnato
[edit]Saul:
- To him ten thousands, and to me but thousands!
- What can they give him more, except the kingdom?
26. Air
[edit]Saul:
- With rage I shall burst his praises to hear!
- Oh, how I both hate the stripling, and fear!
- What mortal a rival in glory can bear?
Exit.
Scene 4
[edit]27. Recitative
[edit]Jonathan:
- Imprudent women! Your ill-timed comparisons,
- I fear, have injured him you meant to honour.
- Saul's furious look, as he departed hence,
- Too plainly shew'd the tempest of his soul.
Michal (to David):
- 'Tis but his old disease, which thou canst cure:
- Oh, take thy harp, and as thou oft hast done,
- From the king's breast expel the raging fiend,
- And sooth his tortur'd soul with sounds divine.
28. Air
[edit]Michal:
- Fell rage and black despair possess'd
- With horrid sway the monarch's breast;
- When David with celestial fire
- Struck the sweet persuasive lyre:
- Soft gliding down his ravish'd ears,
- The healing sounds dispel his cares;
- Despair and rage at once are gone,
- And peace and hope resume the throne.
29. Recitative
[edit]High Priest:
- This but the smallest part of harmony,
- Great attribute of attributes divine,
- And centre of the rest, where all agree:
- Whose wondrous force what great effects proclaim!
30. Accompagnato
[edit]High Priest:
- By Thee this universal frame
- From its Almighty Maker's hand
- In primitive perfection came,
- By Thee produc'd, in thee contain'd:
- No sooner did th'eternal word dispense
- Thy vast mysterious influence,
- Than chaos his old discord ceas'd.
- Nature began, of labour eas'd,
- Her latent beauties to disclose,
- A fair harmonious world arose;
- And though, by diabolic guile,
- Disorder lord it for a while,
- The time will come,
- When nature shall her pristine form regain,
- And harmony for ever reign.
Scene 5
[edit]Saul, David, Jonathan, Merab, Michal, Abner, High Priest.
31. Recitative
[edit]Abner:
- Racked with infernal pains, ev'n now the king
- Comes forth, and mutters horrid words, which hell,
- No human tongue, has taught him.
32. Air
[edit]David:
- O Lord, whose mercies numberless
- O'er all thy works prevail:
- Though daily man Thy law transgress,
- Thy patience cannot fail.
- If yet his sin be not too great,
- The busy fiend control;
- Yet longer for repentance wait,
- And heal his wounded soul.
33. Symphony
[edit]34. Recitative
[edit]Jonathan:
- 'Tis all in vain; his fury still continues:
- With wild distraction on my friend he stares,
- Stamps on the ground, and seems intent on mischief.
35. Air
[edit]Saul:
- A serpent, in my bosom warm'd,
- Would sting me to the heart:
- But of his venom soon disarm'd,
- Himself shall feel the smart.
- Ambitious boy! Now learn what danger
- It is to rouse a monarch's anger!
He throws his javelin. Exit David.
36. Recitative
[edit]Saul:
- Has he escap'd my rage?
- I charge thee, Jonathan, upon thy duty,
- And all, on your allegiance, to destroy
- This bold, aspiring youth; for while he lives,
- I am not safe. Reply not, but obey.
37. Air
[edit]Merab:
- Capricious man, in humour lost,
- By ev'ry wind of passion toss'd!
- Now sets his vassal on the throne,
- Then low as earth he casts him down!
- His temper knows no middle state,
- Extreme alike in love or hate.
Scene 6
[edit]38. Accompagnato
[edit]Jonathan:
- O filial piety! O sacred friendship!
- How shall I reconcile you? Cruel father!
- Your just commands I always have obeyed:
- But to destroy my friend, the brave, the virtuous,
- The godlike David, Israel's defender,
- And terror of her foes! To disobey you —
- What shall I call it? 'Tis an act of duty
- To God, to David — nay, indeed, to you.
39. Air
[edit]Jonathan:
- No, cruel father, no!
- Your hard commands I can't obey.
- Shall I with sacrilegious blow
- Take pious David's life away?
- No, cruel father, no!
- No, with my life I must defend
- Against the world my best, my dearest friend.
40. Air
[edit]High Priest:
- O Lord, whose providence
- Ever wakes for their defence
- Who the ways of virtue choose:
- Let not thy faithful servant fall
- A victim to the rage of Saul
- Who hates without a cause,
- And, in defiance of thy laws,
- His precious life pursues.
41. Chorus:
- Preserve him for the glory of Thy name,
- Thy people's safety, and the heathen's shame.
ACT TWO
[edit]Scene 1
[edit]42. Chorus:
- Envy, eldest born of hell,
- Cease in human breasts to dwell,
- Ever at all good repining,
- Still the happy undermining!
- God and man by thee infested,
- Thou by God and man detested,
- Most thyself thou dost torment,
- At once the crime and punishment!
- Hide thee in the blackest night:
- Virtue sickens at thy sight!
Scene 2
[edit]Jonathan and David.
43. Recitative
[edit]Jonathan:
- Ah, dearest friend, undone by too much virtue!
- Think you, an evil spirit was the cause
- Of all my father's rage? It was, indeed,
- A spirit of envy, and of mortal hate.
- He has resolv'd your death; and sternly charg'd
- His whole retinue, me especially,
- To execute his vengeance.
44. Air
[edit]Jonathan:
- But sooner Jordan's stream, I swear,
- Back to his spring shall swiftly roll,
- Than I consent to hurt a hair
- Of thee, thou darling of my soul.
45. Recitative
[edit]David:
- Oh, strange vicissitude! But yesterday
- He thought me worthy of his daughter's love;
- Today he seeks my life.
Jonathan:
- My sister Merab, by his own gift thy right,
- He hath bestow'd on Adriel.
David:
- Oh, my prince, would that were all!
- It would not grieve me much: the scornful maid
- (Didst thou observe?) with such disdainful pride
- Receiv'd the king's command! But lovely Michal,
- As mild as she is fair, outstrips all praise.
46. Air
[edit]David:
- Such haughty beauties rather move
- Aversion, than engage our love.
- They can only our cares beguile,
- Who gently speak, and sweetly smile.
- If virtue in that dress appear,
- Who, that sees, can love forbear?
- Such beauties. . . da capo.
47. Recitative
[edit]Jonathan:
- My father comes: retire, my friend, while I
- With peaceful accents try to calm his rage.
Exit David.
Scene 3
[edit]Saul and Jonathan.
48. Recitative
[edit]Saul:
- Hast thou obey'd my orders, and destoy'd
- My mortal enemy, the son of Jesse?
Jonathan:
- Alas, my father! He your enemy?
- Say, rather, he has done important service
- To you, and to the nation; hazarded
- His life for both, and slain our giant foe,
- Whose presence made the boldest of us tremble.
49. Air
[edit]Jonathan:
- Sin not, O king, against the youth,
- Who ne'er offended you:
- Think, to his loyalty and truth,
- What great rewards are due!
- Think with what joy this godlike man
- You saw, that glorious day!
- Think, and with ruin, if you can,
- Such services repay.
50. Air
[edit]Saul:
- As great Jehovah lives, I swear,
- The youth shall not be slain:
- Bid him return, and void of fear
- Adorn our court again.
51. Air
[edit]Jonathan:
- From cities stormed, and battles won,
- What glory can accrue?
- By this the hero best is known,
- He can himself subdue.
- Wisest and greatest of his kind,
- Who can in reason's fetters bind
- The madness of his angry mind!
Scene 4
[edit]52. Recitative
[edit]Jonathan:
- Appear, my friend.
Enter David.
Saul:
- No more imagine danger:
- Be first in our esteem; with wonted valour
- Repel the insults of the Philistines:
- And as a proof of my sincerity,
- (Oh, hardness to dissemble!) instantly
- Espouse my daughter Michal.
53. Air
[edit]David:
- Your words, O king, my loyal heart
- With double ardour fire:
- If God his usual aid impart,
- Your foes shall feel what you inspire.
- In all the dangers of the field,
- The great Jehovah is my shield.
Exeunt David and Jonathan.
54. Recitative
[edit]Saul:
- Yes, he shall wed my daughter! But how long
- Shall he enjoy her? He shall lead my armies!
- But have the Philistines no darts, no swords,
- To pierce the heart of David? Yes, this once
- To them I leave him; they shall do me right!
Scene 5
[edit]David and Michal.
55. Recitative
[edit]Michal:
- A father's will has authorized my love:
- No longer, Michal, then attempt to hide
- The secret of my soul. I love thee, David,
- And long have loved. Thy virtue was the cause;
- And that be my defence.
56. Duet
[edit]Michal:
- O fairest of ten thousand fair,
- Yet for thy virtue more admir'd!
- Thy words and actions all declare
- The wisdom by thy God inspir'd.
David:
- O lovely maid! Thy form beheld,
- Above all beauty charms our eyes:
- Yet still within thy form conceal'd,
- Thy mind, a greater beauty, lies.
Both:
- How well in thee does Heav'n at last
- Compensate all my sorrows past.
Exeunt.
57. Chorus
[edit]- Is there a man, who all his ways,
- Directs, his God alone to please?
- In vain his foes against him move:
- Superior pow'r their hate disarms;
- He makes them yield to virtue's charms,
- And melts their fury down to love.
58. Symphony
[edit]Scene 6
[edit]David and Michal.
59. Recitative
[edit]David:
- Thy father is as cruel, and as false,
- As thou art kind and true. When I approach'd him,
- New from the slaughter of his enemies,
- His eyes with fury flam'd, his arms he rais'd,
- With rage grown stronger; by my guiltless head
- The javelin whizzing flew, and in the wall
- Mock'd once again his impotence of malice.
60. Duet
[edit]David:
- At persecution I can laugh;
- No fear my soul can move,
- In God's protection safe,
- And blest in Michal's love.
Michal:
- Ah, dearest youth, for thee I fear!
- Fly, begone, for death is near!
David:
- Fear not, lovely fair, for me:
- Death, where thou art, cannot be;
- Smile, and danger is no more.
Michal:
- Fly, or death is at the door!
- See, the murd'rous band comes on!
- Stay no longer, fly, begone!
Scene 7
[edit]Michal and Doeg.
61. Recitative
[edit]Michal:
- Whom dost thou seek? And who hast sent thee hither?
Doeg:
- I seek for David, and am sent by Saul.
Michal:
- Thy errand?
Doeg:
- 'Tis a summons to the Court.
Michal:
- Say he is sick.
Doeg:
- In sickness or in health,
- Alive or dead, he must be brought to Saul;
- Show me his chamber.
David's bed discovered with an image in it.
- Do you mock the king?
- This disappointment will enrage him more:
- Then tremble for th'event.
Exit.
62. Air
[edit]Michal:
- No, no, let the guilty tremble
- At ev'ry thought of danger near.
- Though numbers, armed with death, assemble,
- My innocence disdains to fear.
- Though great their power as their spite,
- Undaunted still, my soul, remain:
- For greater is Jehovah's might,
- And will their lawless force restrain.
Scene 8
[edit]63. Recitative
[edit]Merab:
- Mean as he was, he is my brother now,
- My sister's husband; and to speak the truth,
- Has qualities which justice bids me love,
- And pity his distress. My father's cruelty
- Strikes me with horror! At th'approaching feast
- I fear some dire event, unless my brother,
- His friend, the faithful Jonathan, avert
- Th'impending ruin. I know he'll do his best.
64. Air
[edit]Merab:
- Author of peace, who canst control
- Every passion of the soul;
- To whose good spirit alone we owe
- Words that sweet as honey flow:
- With thy dear influence his tongue be fill'd,
- And cruel wrath to soft persuasion yield.
Scene 9
[edit]Saul at the Feast of the New Moon.
65. Symphony
[edit]66. Accompagnato
[edit]Saul:
- The time at length is come when I shall take
- My full revenge on Jesses's son.
- No longer shall the stripling make
- His sov'reign totter on the throne.
- He dies — this blaster of my fame,
- Bane of my peace, and author of my shame!
Scene 10
[edit]Saul and Jonathan.
67. Recitative
[edit]Saul:
- Where is the son of Jesse? Comes he not
- To grace our feast?
Jonathan:
- He earnestly ask'd leave
- To go to Bethlem, where his father's house,
- At solemn rites of annual sacrifice,
- Requir'd his presence.
Saul:
- O perverse, rebellious!
- Thinkst thou I do not know that thou hast chose
- The son of Jesse to thy own confusion?
- The world will say thou art no son of mine,
- Who thus canst love the man I hate; the man
- Who, if he lives, will rob thee of thy crown:
- Send, fetch him thither; for the wretch must die.
Jonathan:
- What has he done? And wherefore must he die?
Saul:
- Darest thou oppose my will? Die then thyself!
He throws the javelin. Exit Jonathan, then Saul.
68. Chorus
[edit]- Oh, fatal consequence
- Of rage, by reason uncontroll'd!
- With every law he can dispense;
- No ties the furious monster hold:
- From crime to crime he blindly goes,
- Nor end, but with his own destruction knows.
ACT THREE
[edit]Scene 1
[edit]Saul disguised, at Endor.
69. Accompagnato
[edit]Saul:
- Wretch that I am, of my own ruin author!
- Where are my old supports? The valiant youth,
- Whose very name was terror to my foes,
- My rage has drove away. Of God forsaken,
- In vain I ask his counsel. He vouchsafes
- No answer to the sons of disobedience!
- Even my own courage fails me! Can it be?
- Is Saul become a coward? I'll not believe it!
- If Heav'n denies thee aid, seek it from hell!
70. Accompagnato
[edit]Saul:
- 'Tis said, here lives a woman, close familiar
- With th'enemy of mankind: her I'll consult,
- And know the worst. Her art is death by law;
- And while I minded law, sure death attended
- Such horrid practises. Yet, oh hard fate,
- Myself am now reduc'd to ask the counsel
- Of those I once abhorr'd!
Scene 2
[edit]Saul and the Witch of Endor.
71. Recitative
[edit]Witch:
- With me what would'st thou?
Saul:
- I would, that by thy art thou bring me up
- The man whom I shall name.
Witch:
- Alas! Thou know'st
- How Saul has cut off those who use this art.
- Would'st thou ensnare me?
Saul:
- As Jehovah lives,
- On this account no mischief shall befall thee.
Witch:
- Whom shall I bring up to thee?
Saul:
- Bring up Samuel.
72. Air
[edit]Witch:
- Infernal spirits, by whose pow'r
- Departed ghosts in living forms appear,
- Add horror to the midnight hour,
- And chill the boldest hearts with fear:
- To this stranger's wond'ring eyes
- Let the prophet Samuel rise!
Scene 3
[edit]Apparition of Samuel.
73. Accompagnato
[edit]Samuel:
- Why hast thou forc'd me from the realms of peace
- Back to this world of woe?
Saul:
- O holy prophet!
- Refuse me not thy aid in this distress.
- The num'rous foe stands ready for the battle:
- God has forsaken me: no more he answers
- By prophets or by dreams: no hope remains,
- Unless I learn from thee from course to take.
Samuel:
- Hath God forsaken thee? And dost thou ask
- My counsel? Did I not foretell thy fate,
- When, madly disobedient, thou didst spare
- The curst Amalekite, and on the spoil
- Didst fly rapacious? Therefore God this day
- Hath verified my words in thy destruction,
- Hath rent the kingdom from thee, and bestow'd it
- On David, whom thou hatest for his virtue.
- Thou and thy sons shall be with me tomorrow,
- And Israel by Philistine arms shall fall.
- The Lord hath said it: He will make it good.
74. Symphony
[edit]Scene 4
[edit]David and an Amalekite.
75. Recitative
[edit]David:
- Whence comest thou?
Amalekite:
- Out of the camp of Israel.
David:
- Thou canst inform me then. How went the battle?
Amalekite:
- The people, put to flight, in numbers fell,
- And Saul, and Jonathan his son, are dead.
David:
- Alas, my brother! But how knowest thou
- That they are dead?
Amalekite:
- Upon mount Gilboa
- I met with Saul, just fall'n upon his spear;
- Swiftly the foe pursu'd; he cried to me,
- Begg'd me to finish his imperfect work,
- And end a life of pain and ignominy.
- I knew he could not live, therefore slew him;
- Took from his head the crown, and from his arms
- The bracelets, and have brought them to my lord.
David:
- Whence art thou?
Amalekite:
- Of the race of Amalek.
76. Air
[edit]David:
- Impious wretch, of race accurst!
- And of all that race the worst!
- How hast thou dar'd to lift thy sword
- Again th'anointed of the Lord?
- (To one of his attendants, who kills the Amalekite.)
- Fall on him, smite him, let him die!
- On thy own head thy blood will lie;
- Since thy own mouth has testified,
- By thee the Lord's anointed died.
77. Symphony: dead march
[edit]Scene 5
[edit]Elegy on the death of Saul and Jonathan.
78. Chorus
[edit]- Mourn, Israel, mourn thy beauty lost,
- Thy choicest youth on Gilboa slain!
- How have thy fairest hopes been cross'd!
- What heaps of mighty warriors strew the plain!
79. Air
[edit]High Priest:
- Oh, let it not in Gath be heard,
- The news in Askelon let none proclaim;
- Lest we, whom once so much they fear'd,
- Be by their women now despis'd,
- And lest the daughters of th'uncircumcis'd
- Rejoice and triumph in our shame.
80. Air
[edit]Merab:
- From this unhappy day
- No more, ye Gilboan hills, on you
- Descend refreshing rains or kindly dew,
- Which erst your heads with plenty crown'd;
- Since there the shield of Saul, in arms renown'd,
- Was vilely cast away.
81. Air
[edit]David:
- Brave Jonathan his bow never drew,
- But wing'd with death his arrow flew,
- And drank the blood of slaughter'd foes.
- Nor drew great Saul his sword in vain;
- It reek'd, where'er he dealt his blows,
- With entrails of the mighty slain.
82. Chorus of Israelites
[edit]- Eagles were not so swift as they,
- Nor lions with so strong a grasp
- Held fast and tore the prey.
83. Air
[edit]Michal:
- In sweetest harmony they lived,
- Nor death their union could divide.
- The pious son ne'er left the father's side,
- But him defending bravely died:
- A loss too great to be survived!
- For Saul, ye maids of Israel, moan,
- To whose indulgent care
- You owe the scarlet and the gold you wear,
- And all the pomp in which your beauty long has shone.
84. Solo and Chorus
[edit]Israelites:
- O fatal day! How low the mighty lie!
David and Israelites:
- O Jonathan! How nobly didst thou die,
- For thy king and people slain.
David:
- For thee, my brother Jonathan,
- How great is my distress!
- What language can my grief express?
- Great was the pleasure I enjoy'd in thee,
- And more than woman's love thy wondrous love to me!
David and Israelites:
- O fatal day! How low the mighty lie!
- Where, Israel, is thy glory fled?
- Spoil'd of thy arms, and sunk in infamy,
- How canst thou raise again thy drooping head!
85. Recitative
[edit]High Priest:
- Ye men of Judah, weep no more!
- Let gladness reign in all our host;
- For pious David will restore
- What Saul by disobedience lost.
- The Lord of hosts is David's friend,
- And conquest will his arms attend.
86. Chorus of Israelites
[edit]- Gird on thy sword, thou man of might,
- Pursue thy wonted fame:
- Go on, be prosperous in fight,
- Retrieve the Hebrew name!
- Thy strong right hand, with terror armed,
- Shall thy obdurate foes dismay;
- While others, by thy virtue charm'd,
- Shall crowd to own thy righteous sway.