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Classic and Contemporary Poetry

THE PROTECTOR, by                    
First Line: Let noble thy protector be
Last Line: To fill thy ears, and mouth, and eyes.


Let Noble thy protector be,
Then care not what may chance to thee;
With him thy breastplate have no fear,
Thou art secure from Fortune's spear.

He is as lofty as his name,
His deeds and titles mean the same;
Alike in actions and in speech
He has attained fame's highest reach.

The Lord, the Glorious, the Free,
The Noble: all of these is he,
Describing and connoting him,
His pleonastic synonym.

He ornaments the name of Great
Which other men depreciate;
The sun has opposite degrees
In Libra and in Aries.

What lesser rulers make their boast
His glory would disfigure most;
So slender waists are highly prized,
But slender thighs are much despised.

Of him enquire, and in his praise
Be speaking, on his beauty gaze,
And thou shalt find sufficient prize
To fill thy ears, and mouth, and eyes.





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