Welcome to MyBunny.TV - Your Gateway to Unlimited Entertainment!
    
        Enjoy 6,000+ Premium HD Channels, thousands of movies & series, and experience lightning-fast instant activation.
 
        Reliable, stable, and built for the ultimate streaming experience - no hassles, just entertainment!
    
	MyBunny.TV – Cheaper Than Cable • Up to 
35% Off Yearly Plans • All 
NFL, ESPN, PPV Events Included 🐰
    
        Join the fastest growing IPTV community today and discover why everyone is switching to MyBunny.TV!
    
    
        Start Watching Now
    
 Lord Byron
The Works of Lord Byron, Vol. 1 (Lines)
Lines
WRITTEN IN "LETTERS OF AN ITALIAN NUN AND AN ENGLISH GENTLEMAN, BY J. J. ROUSSEAU; [1] FOUNDED ON FACTS."
            "Away, away,—your flattering arts
            May now betray some simpler hearts;
            And you will smile at their believing,
            And they shall weep at your deceiving."
[Footnote 1: A second edition of this work, of which the title is, Letters, etc., translated from the French of Jean Jacques Rousseau, was published in London, in 1784. It is, probably, a literary forgery.]
ANSWER TO THE FOREGOING, [i] ADDRESSED TO MISS——.
         Dear simple girl, those flattering arts,
         (From which thou'dst guard frail female hearts,)[ii]
         Exist but in imagination,
         Mere phantoms of thine own creation; [iii]
         For he who views that witching grace,
         That perfect form, that lovely face,
         With eyes admiring, oh! believe me,
         He never wishes to deceive thee:
         Once in thy polish'd mirror glance [iv]
         Thou'lt there descry that elegance
         Which from our sex demands such praises,
         But envy in the other raises.—
         Then he who tells thee of thy beauty, [v]
         Believe me, only does his duty:
        Ah! fly not from the candid youth;
        It is not flattery,—'tis truth. [vi]
        July, 1804.
[Footnote i: Answer to the above. [4to] ]
[Footnote ii: From which you'd. [4to] ]
[Footnote iii:
Mere phantoms of your own creation; For he who sees. [4to]]
[Footnote iv:
Once let you at your mirror glance You'll there descry that elegance, [4to]]
[Footnote v:
Then he who tells you of your beauty. [4to]]
[Footnote vi:
It is not flattery, but truth. [4to]]