>>80329
>>80333
"Eliza" was how she was called
"Elizabeth Carter" wrote the poem that the Illumanati alleged had to recite in a slightly altered form
ODE to WISDOM,
By a Lady.
I.
The solitary Bird of Night
Throβ the thick Shades now wings his Flight,
And quits his Time-shook Towβr;
Where, shelterβd from the Blaze of Day,
In Philosophic Gloom he lay,
Beneath his Ivy Bowβr.
II.
With Joy I hear the solemn Sound,
Which midnight Echoes waft around,
And sighing Gales repeat.
Favβrite of Pallas! I attend,
And, faithful to thy Summons, bend
At Wisdomβs awful Seat.
III.
She loves the cool, the silent Eve,
Where no false Shews of Life deceive,
Beneath the Lunar Ray.
Here Folly drops each vain Disguise,
Nor sport her gaily-colourβd Dyes,
As in the Beam of Day.
IV.
O Pallas! Queen of evβry Art,
That glads the Sense, and mends the Heart,
Blest Source of purer Joys!
In evβry Form of Beauty bright,
That captivates the mental Sight
With Pleasure and Surprize;
V.
To thy unspotted Shrine I bow:
Attend thy modest Suppliantβs Vow,
That breathes no wild Desires;
But taught by thy unerring Rules,
To shun the fruitless Wish of Fools,
To nobler Views aspires.
VI.
Not Fortuneβs Gem, Ambitionβs Plume,
Nor Cythereaβs fading Bloom,
Be Objects of my Prayβr:
Let Avβrice, Vanity, and Pride,
Those envyβd glittβring Toys divide,
The dull Rewards of Care.
VII.
To me thy better Gifts impart,
Each moral Beauty of the Heart,
By studious Thought refinβd;
For Wealth, the Smiles of glad Content,
For Powβr, its amplest, best Extent,
An Empire oβer my Mind.
VIII.
When Fortune drops her gay Parade,
When Pleasureβs transient Roses fade,
And wither in the Tomb,
Unchangβd is thy immortal Prize;
Thy ever-verdant Laurels rise
In undecaying Bloom.
IX.
By Thee protected, I defy
The Coxcombβs Sneer, the stupid Lye
Of Ignorance and Spite:
Alike contemn the leaden Fool,
And all the pointed Ridicule
Of undiscerning Wit.
X.
From Envy, Hurry, Noise, and Strife,
The dull Impertinence of Life,
In thy Retreat I rest:
Pursue thee to the peaceful Groves,
Where Platoβs sacred Spirit roves,
In all thy Beauties drest.
XI.
He bad Ilyssusβ tuneful Stream
Convey thy Philosophic Theme
Of Perfect, Fair, and Good:
Attentive Athens caught the Sound,
And all her listβning Sons around
In awful Silence stood:
XII.
Reclaimβd her wild, licentious Youth,
Confessβd the potent Voice of Truth,
And felt its just Controul.
The Passions ceasβd their loud Alarms,
And Virtueβs soft persuasive Charms
Oβer all their Senses stole.
XIII.
Thy Breath inspires the Poetβs Song,
The Patriotβs free, unbiassβd Tongue,
The Heroβs genβrous Strife;
Thine are Retirementβs silent Joys,
And all the sweet engaging Ties
Of still, domestic Life.
XIV
No more to fabled Names confinβd,
To the Supreme all-perfect Mind,
My Thoughts direct their Flight.
Wisdomβs thy Gift & all her force
From thee derivβd Eternal Source
Of Intellectual Light.
XV
O send her sure, her steady Ray,
To regulate my doubtful Way,
Throβ Lifeβs perplexing Road:
The Mists of Error to controul,
And throβ its Gloom direct my Soul
To Happiness and Good.
XVI
Beneath Her clear discerning Eye
The visionary Shadows fly
Of Follyβs painted Show.
She sees throβ evβry fair Disguise,
That All but Virtueβs solid Joys,
Are Vanity and Woe."
https://8kun.top/squirrel/res/93.html#q431
Still looking for the older links n this board to Owl.
It contained a text from a "Woman's Encyclopaedia" which said the same word in Greek meant Witch