Anna Seward

Sonnet LXXIX

While unsuspecting trust in all that wears

Virtue's bright semblance, stimulates my heart

To find its dearest pleasures in the part

Taken in other's joys; yielding to theirs

Its own desires, each latent wish that bears

The selfish stamp, O! let me shun the art

Taught by smooth Flattery in her courtly mart,

Where Simulation's studied smile ensnares!

Scorn that exterior varnish for the Mind,

Which, while it polishes the manners, veils

In showy clouds the soul.—E'en thus we find

Glass, o'er whose surface clear the pencil steals,

Grown less transparent, tho' with colours gay,

Sheds but the darken'd and ambiguous ray.