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William Cowper - On Pedigree. From EpicharmusWilliam Cowper - On Pedigree. From Epicharmus
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My mother! if thou love me, name no more My noble birth!  Sounding at every breath My noble birth, thou kill`st me.  Thither fly, As to their only refuge, all from whom Nature withholds all good besides; they boast Their noble birth, conduct us to the tombs Of their forefathers, and, from age to age Ascending, trumpet their illustrious race: But whom hast thou beheld, or canst thou name, Derived from no forefathers?  Such a man Lives not; for how could such be born at all? And, if it chance that, native of a land Far distant, or in infancy deprived Of all his kindred, one, who cannot trace His origin, exist, why deem him sprung From baser ancestry than theirs who can? My mother! he whom nature at his birth Endow`d with virtuous qualities, although An Æthiop and a slave, is nobly born.
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