The Works of Peter Pindar [i.e. John Wolcot] ... With a Copious Index. To which is prefixed Some Account of his Life. In Four Volumes |
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ODE UPON ODE.
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| The Works of Peter Pindar [i.e. John Wolcot] | ||
ODE UPON ODE.
OR A PEEP AT SAINT JAMES's,
OR NEW YEAR's DAY, OR WHAT YOU WILL.
READER,
I think it necessary to inform thee if thou hast not read Mr. Warton's Ode, that I mean not to say that he hath, totidem verbis, sung what I have asserted of him; I therefore beg that my Ode may be considered as an amplification of the ingenious laureat's idea.
HORACE.
To painters now my court respectful pay;
Now (ever welcome!) on the Muse's wings,
Drop in at Windsor, on the best of kings;
Now, at St. James's, about Handel prate,
Hear odes, see lords and 'squires, and smile at state.
PROËMIUM.
Is destin'd to record, in handsome rhime,
The deeds of British monarchs, twice a year:
If great—how happy is the tuneful tongue!
If pitiful—(as Shakspeare says) the song
‘Must suckle fools, and chronicle small beer.’
Kings cannot always oracles be hatching:
Maggots are oft the tenants of a crown—
Therefore, like those in cheese, not worth the catching.
Or (what's more sought) good interest at court,
Thou get'st of lyric trumpeter the place,
And hundreds are, like gudgeons, gaping for't;
Hear! (at a palace if thou mean'st to thrive)
And of a steady coachman learn to drive.
Let fancy lend thy muse her loftiest wing—
Stun with thy minstrelsy th' affrighted sphere;
Bid thy voice thunder like a hundred batteries;
For common sounds, conveying common flatteries,
Are zephyrs whisp'ring to the royal ear.
Hot spices suit alone their pamper'd nature:
Alas! the stomach, parch'd by burning drams,
With mad-dog terror starts at simple water.
And, as a horse-pond wide, are monarch maws—
Form'd, therefore, on a pretty ample scale:
To sound the decent panegyric note,
To pour the modest flatt'ries down their throat,
Were off'ring shrimps for dinner to a whale.
To touch to Abigails of courts, the strings;
Give the queen's toad-eater a handsome sop,
And swear she always has more grace
Than ev'n to sell the meanest place—
Swear too, the woman keeps no title-shop;
Who on each passenger for custom stare;
And, in the happy tones of traffic, cry,
‘Sher! vat you buy, sher?—Madam! vat you buy?’
The true-bred courtiers wonder whilst I preach—
And, with grave vizards, and stretch'd eyes to God,
Pronounce my sermon a most impious speech:
With all my spirit—let them damn my lays—
A courtier's curses are exalted praise.
‘Fie, Peter, Peter! fie for shame!
Such counsel disagrees with my digestion.’
Well! well! then, my old Socrates, to please thee,
For much I'm willing of thy qualms to ease thee,
I'll nobly take the other side the question.
Flatt'ry, base coin—a cheat upon the nation;
And yet, our vanity doth much admire it,
And really gives it all its circulation.
The world—a bottle of Tokay so fine—
The engine always can its cork subdue,
And make an easy conquest of the wine.
This oak is often honest blunt John Bull—
Which ivy would its great supporter choak
Whilst John (so thick the walls of his dark soull)
Deems it a pretty ornament, and struts—
Till Master Ivy creeps into John's guts;
And gives poor thoughtless John a set of gripes:
Then, like an organ, opening all his pipes,
John roars; and, when to a consumption drain'd,
Finds out the knave his folly entertain'd.
As simply as a Quaker-beauty drest:—
No ostentation her's—no vain parade:
Sweet nymph! and of few words possest;
Yet, heard with rev'rence when she silence breaks,
And dignifies the man of whom she speaks.
Cover'd with rouge, and flauntingly array'd—
Makes saucy love to ev'ry man she meets,
And offers ev'n her favours in the streets.
Divines so grave—Philosophers can bear her;
What's stranger still, with childish rapture hear her—
Nay, court the smiling harlot's very kisses.
ODE.
Or custard-pudding at a city feast,
Tom's incense greets his sovereign's hungry nose:
For, bating birth-day torrents from Parnassus,
And New-year's spring-tide of divine molasses,
Fame in a scanty rill to Windsor flows.
Delighted all the country with their rhimes;—
Sung knights and barbed steeds with valour big:
Knights who encounter'd witches—murder'd wizards,
Flogg'd Pagans, till they grumbled in their gizzards:
Rogues! with no more religion than a pig:—
Through pretty little well-form'd eyelet holes,
By pious pikes and godly lances made—
Tools! that work'd wonders in the holy trade;
And therefore qualified (I wot) full well,
With force the sacred oracles to tell
Unto the thickest unbelieving sculls:—
Took boldly to the Holy Land a journey,
To plant, with swords, in hearts, the Gospel seeds;
Just as we hole for cucumbers, hot-beds,
Or pierce the bosom of the sullen earth,
To give to radishes or onions birth:—
And to an enemy obliged to yield,
Could neither leg, nor arm, nor neck, nor nob stir:
Poor devils! who, like alligators hack'd,
At length by hammers, hatchets, sledges, crack'd,
Were dragg'd from coats of armour—like a lobster.
On idle daring red-cross raggamuffins,
Who, for their childishness, deserv'd a birch:
Quoth Tom, a worthier subject now, thank God!
Inspires the lofty dealer in the ode,
Than blockheads battling for old mother church.
The poet scorns what charm'd of yore the sight—
Goths, Vandals, castles, horses, mares:—
The polish'd poet of the present day,
Doth in his tasty shop display,
Ah! vastly prettier-colour'd wares.
Quoth Tom—to monarchs, who, with rapture wild,
Hear their own praise with mouths of gaping wonder,
And catch each crotchet of the Birth-day thunder:
Crotchets that scorn the praise of common folly—
Though not most musical—most melancholy.
Ah! crotchets doom'd to charm our ears no more,
Although by Mr. Parsons set in score.
Drear and eternal silence doom'd to keep,
Where the dark waters of oblivion sleep—
To speak in humbler English—doom'd to rest,
With court addresses, in a musty chest.
They were the charming'st things they ever heard:
As for example—all the angels Gideons—
That is, my lady, and her daughters fair,
With coal-black eyebrows, and sweet Hebrew air—
The lovely produce of the two religions:
When sportsmen very wisely cross the breed:
And thus with nobler lustre shines the fowl
Begot between a game hen and an owl.
‘Dat shince he haf turn Chreestian, and eat hog,
He nebber did hear mooshic half sho fine;
No! nebber shince he lefs de shinnygogue.’
And one deaf ear, was there in wonder drown'd!
List'ning, in attitude of Corporal Trim,
He rais'd his thin grey curl to catch the sound:
But in his own immortal glees and catches .
Yet were those crotchets all condemn'd to rest
In the dark bosom of a musty chest!
As charm'd my lady mayoress and lord mayor;
Who thought (and really they were true believers)
The music equall'd marrowbones and cleavers.
In saying, that they equall'd David's psalms;
But not surpass'd in melody the bell
That mournful soundeth an archbishop's knell;
Strains! that Sir Joseph Mawbey deem'd divine,
Sweet as the quavers of his fattest swine.
In all the tuneful agonies of pain;
And call'd the music and the words sublime.
A peer who, too, delights in opera-dancing;
Thus sagely both those useful arts advancing,
And nobly spreading Britain's fame abroad.
Behind the op'ra scenes he constant goes,
To kiss the little finger of Coulon ,
To mark her knees, and many-twinkling toes.
Cry'd bravo! bravo! charming! bravo! charming!
And majesty itself, to music bred,
Pronounc'd it ‘Very, very good, indeed!’
Indulging, p'rhaps, the very nat'ral dream,
That all its charms were owing to the theme.
Might in the brace of royal bosoms rise,
To think they heard it without waste of treasure;
As sixpences are lovely in their eyes.
Thus, in a tone of impudence, exclaim—
‘Good God! how kings and queens a song adore!
With what delight they order an encore!
When that same song, encor'd, for nothing flows!
This Madam Mara to her sorrow knows.’
‘To Windsor, oft, and eke to Kew,
The r*y*l mandate Mara drew.
No cheering drop the dame was ask'd to sip—
No bread was offer'd to her quiv'ring lip:
Though faint, she was not suffer'd to sit down,—
Such was the goodness—grandeur of the cr**n!
How much for song and chaise-hire she receiv'd?
Most surely forty.—‘No, no.’—Thirty.—‘Poh!
Pray, guess in reason,—come, again.’—
Alas! you jeer us—twenty at the least;
No man could ever be so great a b**st
As not to give her twenty for her pain.—
‘To keep you, then, no longer in suspense,
For Mara's chaise-hire and unrivall'd note,
Out of their wonderful benevolence,
Their bounteous m---ies gave—not a groat.’
‘I know a story like it—You shall hear—
Poor Mrs. Siddons, she was order'd out—
To wait upon their m*j***ies, to spout—
To read old Shakspeare's As you like it to 'em;
And how to mind their stops, and commas, show 'em:
She read—was told 'twas very, very fine,
Excepting here and there a line,—
To which the royal wisdom did object—
And which in all the pride of emendation,
And partly to improve her reputation,
His m*j***y thought proper to correct:
Then turning to the partner of his bed,
On tiptoe mounted by self-approbation,
A very modest elevation,
He cry'd ‘Mind, Charly, that's the way to read.’
Stood all the time—was nearly tir'd to death;
Whilst both their m*j***ies, in royal style,
At perfect ease were sitting all the while.
Not offer'd to her was one drop of beer,
Nor wine, nor chocolate, her heart to cheer:
Ready to drop to earth, she must have sunk,
But for a child, that at the hardship shrunk—
A little prince, who mark'd her situation,
Thus, pitying, pour'd a tender exclamation:
How pale! I'm sure she cannot longer read:
And would, I'm sure, be happy in a chair.”
Surly enough—one fairly may suppose!
And to a room adjoining made retreat,
To let her, for one minute, steal a seat.
Where generosity's a crying sin:
Her curt'sy dropp'd—was nodded to—came out—
So rich!’—How rich!—‘As rich as she went in.’
Are princes, pray, like common folks to act?
Such r*y*l conduct, I'd cry, Fie upon her!
To Mrs. Siddons freely say the same—
Sufficient for such people is the honour!
Although I've said of them such handsome things—
Nay, not their eye's attention, whose bright ray
Would, like the sun, illumine my poor lay,
And, like the sun, so kind to procreation,
Increase within my brain the maggot nation.
So much for idle tales.—Now, Muse, thy strain
Digressive, turn to drawing-rooms again.
And whisper'd majesty, 'twas vastly fine;—
Then wish'd such harmony could once be found
Where he, each day, was treated like a swine
By that arch-fiend Charles Fox, and his vile party—
Villains! in nought but black rebellion hearty;
The sacred sceptre underneath the mace,
And twisted ropes, with malice disappointed,
To hamper or to hang the Lord's anointed.
‘Don't mind—don't mind—the rogues their aim have miss'd—
Don't fear your place, whilst I am well supply'd—
But mind, mind poverty of Civil List.
Compare me—yes, compare me to poor Job.
What, what, Pitt—hæ? We must have t'other grant—
What, what? You know, Pitt, that my old dead aunt
Left not a sixpence, Pitt, these eyes to bless,
But from the parish sav'd that fool at Hesse.
I was a constant hunter—Nimrod still;
And when in state as dead's a mack'rel lying,
I car'd not, for I knew the woman's will.
Which some folks thought prodigiously profane,
I took it—yes—I took it in my head,
To order Sir John Brute at Drury Lane;—
Had she respected me, I do aver,
I shou'd have stay'd at home, and thought of her.’
Vote not a halfpenny for Carlton House—
This may appear like wonderful barbarity—
But mind, Pitt, mind—he gains in popularity.
And monnt an eagle to the skies—
But poverty will check his daring flight—
Besides, should George receive a grant—
He gets the golden orbs I want—
Then Civil List deficiences, good night!
Losing all sort of rev'rence for a crown,
What's very strange too, Pitt, I'll tell ye more—
The rascal came into my house, and swore
'Twas a just bill, and that he must be paid;
Yes, that he wou'd, he swore—(how saucy! Pitt)—
Or send a lawyer to me with a writ.
To say that Brown had gain'd enough—
And bid him to the Palace come no more
To pester majesty with bills and stuff.
On which the premier, with a falt'ring bow,
Star'd in the face by Truth—looking I don't know how,
Hem'd out a faint assent—Heav'ns, how polite!
Not to give majesty the least offence!
Whereas, the Chancellor, had he been there,
Whose tutor, one would think, had been a bear;
Thinking a Briton to no forms confin'd,
But born with privilege to speak his mind;
Had answer'd with a thund'ring tongue,
‘I think your majesty d*mn*tion wrong—
I know no moral or prescriptive right
In kings to ------ a subject of a mite:—
Give him his just demand—it is but fit—
Such littlenesses look extremely odd—
Before me should the matter come, by G*d
Your majesty will cursedly be bit—
Kings by a sense of honour should be sway'd—
Holland must, will, by G*d he shall, be paid.’
Whose sweet falsetto voice is often sported
In glees and catches; so that all who hear,
Believe a pretty semi-vir imported.
Lord Salisbury prais'd the words and air;
My lord—who boasts a pretty tuneful palate,
Who kindly teaches cobblers how to sing,
Instructs his butler, baker, on the string,
And with Apollo's laurel crowns his valet .
Butlers, and lick-trenchers!’ my reader roars;
‘The sacred art is in a sweet condition—
A pretty way of rubbing out old scores!
Soon probably his grandmother, or nurse,
May to the happy band unite their notes—
Perchance, the list respectable to grace,
His lordship's fav'rite horse may show his face,
And earn, as chorus singer, all his oats.’
Sir Charles , the active, elegant, and supple,
Join'd with the happy beings of the ring,
And bow'd and scrap'd before the sceptred couple;
Pour'd high encomium on the birth-day din,
And won the meed of many a royal grin.
Form'd perfectly upon the courtier plan;
And round his majesty so lively skips:
Explores its wants, and dwells upon its stare,
As if he really was to live or die
According to th' appearance of the glare:
Hops, dances, of true courtliness the type,
Just like a pea on a tobacco pipe.
With aspect conscious of a glorious crown;
Look down with surly grandeur on the knight,
As if such servile homage was his right;
And by a stare, inform the fearful thing,
The diff'rence 'twixt a subject and a king.
A noble Newfoundland dog in the streets,
He creeps, and whines, and licks the lofty brute;
Curls round him, falls upon his back, and then
Springs up and gambols—frisks it back agen,
And crawls in dread submission to his foot;
Looks up, and hugs his neck, and seems t'intreat him,
With ev'ry mark of terror, not to eat him.
Cocks high his tail and ears, his state to show;
Then lifts his leg (a little unpolite)
And almost drowns the supplicant below;
‘Great is my power—but, lo! I'll not abuse it;
I'm Cæsar! paltry creature, go thy way;
But mind, I can devour thee, if I choose it.’
Skips from his majesty behind the scene,
To make a famous actress blest, by saying,
How pleas'd the monarch is—how oft he clapp'd,
How oft the queen her fan so gracious tapp'd,
In approbation of her charming playing!
Rush back again o'erjoy'd, through thin and thick,
And to their sacred majesties repair,
Loaded with curt'sies, speeches, thanks, fine things!
Proud as some old dame's nag with queens and kings
Of gingerbread, to grace a country fair.
With something new, the royal mouths shall utter,
Sweet to the actress's astonish'd ear,
As sugar plums to brats—or bread and butter;
With the great actress's sublime reply;
‘Pray thank their majesties’ extreme good nature,
Who in their goodnesses can condescend
To honour thus their poor devoted creature:
Whose patronage gives glory to a name—
Whose smiles alone confer immortal fame—
I beg, Sir Charles, you'll say the humblest things—
Commend me to the best of queens and kings.’
And with them charm of majesty the sun,
And bid him, like his brother in the skies,
Dart smiling radiance from his mouth and eyes!
Thrice happy knight! all parties form'd to please!
Blest porter of such messages as these!
An aid-de-camp, his general's orders carrying;
Bravely he gallops through the bullet show'rs,
But scarce a single minute tarrying;
Then to the general back with answer comes,
'Midst the deep thunder of great guns and drums;
Then back, then forth again behold him hurry;
To this that runs away, to that which rallies,
All bustle, uproar wild, and hurry scurry!
Old Lady Mary Duncan (says report).
‘What, no dear, dear castrato here!’ she sigh'd;
‘Why then—p*x take the roarings and the court;
Then Lord have mercy on my tortur'd ears,
And shield me from the shouts of such he-bears.
Then may I never more hear sounds like these;
In days of yore they might have had their merit,
Amongst the rams'-horns to have borne a bob,
That did at Jericho the wond'rous job—
Knock'd down the wall with so much spirit.
Amongst a pack of drunken asses;
To break, as if it were, with sticks,
The bones of bottles and poor glasses,
Where Rubinelli's sostenuto note?
That tickled oft my sighing soul to pain,
That bade my senses in Elysium float?
Avaunt! you vile black-bearded rogues—avaunt!
'Tis smoother chins, and sweeter tones, I want.’
Who, marv'ling, cock'd his time discerning ear
To strains that did such honour to a throne—
There Uxbridge taught the audience how to think;
With much significant and knowing wink,
And speeches clad in wisdom's critic tone;
Who look'd musicians through with half-shut eyes;
Most solemn, most chromatically wise!
This fiddler now—now that, so kindly greeting,
Appear'd, and shrewdly pour'd his hahs and hums:
Great in tatto, my lord, and cross-hand roll;
Great in the Dead-march stroke sublime of Saul,
He beats Old Assbridge on the kettle drums.
That such a charming drummer should be lost!
And feel through life his glories overcast
At that dull board , where, never could he learn,
Of ships the diff'rence between stem and stern,
Hen-coops and boats, the rudder and the mast.
No!—Mun was cutting out for Hastings, work;
Writing to cousin Will and Co. , to league 'em
Against that rogue, who, like a ruffian, rose,
And tweak'd a bulse of jewels from the nose
Of dames in India, christen'd Munny Begum.
On that most horrid imp, Sir Thomas Rumbold;
Vow'd, like a sheep, to flay that eastern thief;
Till strange good fortune open'd Edmund's eyes:
Oh! then he heard of innocence the cries,
And, like Jew converts, damn'd his old belief.
Yet, let some praise for Mun's conversion pass
To that great wonder-worker, Saint Dundas.
And swore no man, in virtue, e'er went further;
To prove which oath, this Powell took a knife,
And made the world believe it, by self murther.
Made when vile Tippoo Saib in triumph rode,
And play'd the devil on our Indian borders,
In person, or by vile Satanic orders:
From trope to trope, a downright rabbit skipping,
And give the noble governor a whipping?
Meant, school boy like to take down Hastings' breeches
Thou smil'st consent—I thank thee—Here it is.
Know, I've not caught the itch of party sin;
To Pitt, or Fox, I never did belong;
Truth, truth I seek—so help me god of song!
Well then—suspicion that I mayst incur,
But, like a Christian, swear I do not sham—
By all the angels of yon lofty sky,
Where burning seraphims and cherubs cry,
I'm of no party—curse me if I am!
Cut, for the love of God, in halves and quarters;
By each black soul in purgatory frying;
By all those whiter souls, though we can't see 'em,
Singing their Ave Mary and Te Deum
On yon bright cloud—I swear I am not lying.
Of whom, and when, and what, she pleases, sing;
Though privy councils , jealous of her note,
Prescrib'd, of late, a halter for her throat.
Hawk—satire—what you will—shall mark her flight;
Through huts or palaces ('tis just the same),
With equal rage, pursue the panting game;
And lay (by princes, or by peasants, bred)
Low at the owner's feet, the cuckow, dead.
Though not a Purcell, his grace is admitted, by many of his musical guests, to be a very pretty catchmaker.
Mr. Holland, who married a daughter of the late Capability Brown, and who hath several times impertinently troubled the Palace with a bill of two thousand pounds, due for work done by his father-in-law in the royal gardens.
His lordship made some sad appointments to his majesty's band—ignorant, unmusical rogues, who receive the salary, and thrum by proxy: however he hath behaved better lately, and made atonement, by giving Shield, Dance, Blake, Parke, and Hackwood, to the band.
ODE TO EDMUND.
Well pleas'd I see his mill-like mouth at work,
He gives of Elocution such a feast!
He tells of such dread doings in the East!
And sighs, as 'twere, for his own flesh and blood.
Crore, Choultry, Begum, leave his lips in thunder.
Employ'd by that vile son of Hyder Naig,
Nam'd Tippoo—Gags! that British mouths detest!
Occasion'd partly by that man so sad,
That Hastings!—oh! deserving all that's bad—
That villian, murd'rer, tyrant, dog, wild beast!
Poor Edmund groans—and Britain is undone!
(God knows though) been in a snug room,
By coals or wood made comfortably warm,
And often fancied that a storm without,
Hath made a diabolic rout—
Sunk ships—tore trees up—done a world of harm.
Fancying thou heardst of mariners the cries;
And sigh'd, ‘How wretched now must thousands be!
‘Oh! how I pity the poor souls at sea!’
When, lo! this dreadful tempest, and his roar,
A zephyr—in the key-hole of the door!
Pressing through Edmund's lungs for loaves and fishes,
On which he long hath look'd with longing eye,
To fill poor Edmund's not o'er burden'd dishes?
Britain be safe, and Hastings prove a saint.
Delighted in digression to be gadding.
The last in catches wonderfully mended.
The lovely Lady Clarges too was there,
To all the graces as to music born:
Whose notes so sweetly melting soothes the ear!
Soft as the robin's to the blush of morn!
Whose fingers fair the strings so nicely pat,
And bow that brings out sounds unknown at Babel—
Though not so sweet as those of Mr. Abel.
Who music cons as well as law; and swears
The girl shall scrub no soul's but Handel's airs,
To whom he thinks our great composers, cats:
And twenty more, who never had the luck
To please the nicer ears of some crown'd folk;
Ears that, like other people's though they grow,
Poor creatures! really want the sense to know
Psalm tunes so mournful from the old Black Joke.
Much travel'd Burney, came to hear and see;
He, in his tour, who found such great protectors—
Kings, queens, dukes, margraves, margravines, electors,
Who ask'd the doctor many a gracious question,
And treated him with marv'lous hospitality;
Guessing he had as clever a digestion
For meat and drink, as music of rare quality—
But turn'd his disappointed eyes to God;
And wish'd it his own setting, with a sigh!—
For, ere to Salisbury's house the doctor came—
To get, as ode-setter, enroll'd his name—
Behold! behold the wedding was gone by.
Parsons, who, daring, dash'd through thick and thin—
Eclipse the second!—got like lightning in,
When Burney just had reach'd the distance post.
That, though his heart was mortified enow,
The doctor did his rivals heart admire,
And own'd his maiden crotchets full of fire—
Crotchets! though sweet alas! condemn'd to lie,
Like royal virtues, hid from mortal eye!
To Tom's big phrase, to make sublimer cries;
Thrice happy union to entrance the soul!
How like the notes of cats, a vocal pair,
By boys (to catch their wild and mingled air)
Tied tail to tail, and thrown across a pole!
Why heard he not the air and lofty rhime?
The sleek Welsh deity, who music knows—
The Alexander of the Tot'n'am troops ,
Who, tutor'd by his stampings, nods, grunts, whoops,
Do wondrous execution with their bows?
Far in his Cambrian villa sat alone;
Whilst anger swell'd the volume of his face,
Flaming, like suns of London in a fog;
Of Mrs. Walsingham he sung with ire;
His eyes as red as ferret's eyes, with fire;
His mighty soul for vengeance all agog.
His sledge-like fist o'er Agamemnon rear'd,
And down his throat wou'd fain his words have ramm'd;
Who, after oaths (a pretty decent volley),
And rating the long monarch for his folly,
Inform'd the king of men he might be d*mn'd;
Then to his tent majestic strode, to strum,
And scrape his anger out on tweedle-dum.
From 'squire Apollo lineally descended—
A dame who dances, paints, and plays, and sings;
The saint Cecilia,—queen of wind and strings!
Though scarcely bigger than a cat—a dame
'Midst the Bas Bleus, a giant as to fame.
When fiddle, hautboy, clarinet, bassoon,
On Sunday (deem'd by us good Christians, odd)
Unite their clang, and pour their merry tune
In jiggish gratitude to God;
Lo! if a witless member should desire,
Instead of Handel, strains perchance of Haydn,
A fierce Semiramis she flames with fire—
This Amazonian, crotchet-loving maiden!
She looks at him with such a pair of eyes!—
Reader, by way of simile-digression,
Which to my subject happily applies—
Didst ever see Grimalkin in a passion,
Lifting her back, and ears, and tail, and hair;
Giving her two expressive goglers,
(Not in the sweet and tender style of oglers)
A fierce, broad, wild, fix'd, furious, threat'ning stare?
Of this great lady at her tuneful club—
Who very often hath been heard to rave,
And with much eloquence the members snub.
That if musicians miss but half a bar,
Just like an Irishman she starts to bother—
And, in the violence of quaver madness,
Where nought should reign but harmony and gladness,
She knocks one tuneful head against another;
Then screams in such chromatic tones
Upon Apollo's poor affrighted sons,
Whose trembling tongues, when her's begins to sound,
Are in the din vociferating drown'd!
Shakes all the city with his iron tongue,
The little tinklers might as well be dumb
As ask attention to their puny song,
So much the Liliputians are o'ercome
By the deep thunder of the mighty Tom.
Enrag'd, upon a time pull'd off his wig,
And flung it plump in poor Cuzzoni's face,
Because the little syren miss'd a grace:
Musicians, therefore, should beware;
Or in the face of some unlucky chap,
Although she cannot fling a load of hair,
She probably may dart her cap.
Hath slily whisper'd amatory things,
And, more, by passion than by music sway'd,
Broke on the tuneful dialogue of strings;
Rous'd like a tigress from a fav'rite feast,
Up hath the valiant gentlewoman sprung,
With lightning look, and thund'ring tongue,
Ready with out-stretch'd neck to eat the beast
Mix with the air divine his love-sick trash.
With music knowledges of every kind,
From that poor nothing-monger, old Quilici,
To Handel's lofty and capacious mind:
Run wild divisions on the various merit
Of this and that composer's spirit—
On Gluck's sublimities be all so chatty—
Talk of the serio-comic of Piccini,
Compare the elegance of sweet Sacchini,
And iron melodies of old Scarlatti!
Their very mention gives the dame the spleen:
'Twere e'en disgrace to tell their mawkish names:
Mere cart-horses—poor uninventive fools,
Who neither music make, nor know its rules—
Whose works should only come to light in flames.
Nought can her science well transcend,—
If you the lady's own opinion ask;
And when she talks of musical enditers,
She shows a vast acquaintance with all writers,
And takes them critically all to task.
Dear gentlewoman; who, so great, so chaste,
So foreign in her tweedle-dummish taste,
Faints at the name of that enchanting fellow,
The melting Amoroso, Paisiello!
With notes on Tarchi, Sarti, will o'erwhelm ye:
Giordani, sweeter than the Hybla honey:
Anfossi, Cimerosa, Bach, Bertoni,
Rauzzini, Abel, Pleyel, Guglielmi!
Can tell you, that th' Italian school is airy,
Expressive, elegant, light as a fairy:
The German, heavy, deep, scholastic;
The French, most miserably, whining, moaning,
Oft like poor devils in the cholic groaning,
Noisy and screaming, hideous, Hudibrastic.
With wond'ring eyes, and mouths of wide amaze,
To hear her pompously demand the key
Of ev'ry piece musicians play.
Astonish'd see this petticoat-Apollo,
With stamping foot, and beck'ning hands
And head, time-nodding, issue high commands,
Beating the Tot'n'am-road director hollow.
And catch each crotchet of her rich discourse,
Utter'd with classic elegance and force,
On Diatonic and Chromatic scale:
Then stare to see the lady wisely pore
On scientific zig-zag score.
'Midst tuning instruments, each other greeting,
Screaming as if they had not met for years,
So joyous, and so great their clatter!—say,
Didst ever see this lady striking A
Upon her harpsichord, with bending ears?
With open mouth, and stare profound,
Attention nail'd, and head awry,
Watching each atom of the tuneful cry,
Till Alamire unison goes round?
Didst ever see her hands outstretch'd like wings,
Towards the band, though led by Cramer,
Wide swimming for pianos on the strings—
Now sudden rais'd, like Mr. Christie's hammer,
To bid the forte roar in sudden thunder,
And fill the gaping multitude with wonder?
Thou never didst?—then, friend, without a hum,
I envy thee a happiness to come!
To kings, for babe-like manners simple styl'd,
And grac'd with virtues that would fill a tun;
To him the poet humbly makes a leg,
Who, goose-like, brooding o'er the favourite egg
Of genius, gives the Phœnix to the sun.
And never more delighted than when hatching;
Which makes the number offer'd to the sun,
So vast!—why, verily as thick as peas,
That people may collect, with equal ease,
A thousand noble instances, as one.
All hatch'd—some living—others gone to Heav'n:
Thus in the pinnick's nest the cuckow lays,
Then, easy as a Frenchman, takes her flight:—
Due homage to the eggs the pinnick pays,
And brings the little lubbers into light.
Of m****chs, who, with œconomic fury,
Force all the tuneful world to Tot'n'am Lane,
And lock up all the doors of harmless Drury .
That thus, in anger, m*****y should lock it?
Muse, are the Tot'n'am street subscribers poor?
Will Drury keep some pence from Tot'n'am's pocket?
Doth threat'ning bankruptcy extend a gloom
O'er the proud walls of Tot'n'am's regal room?
Hinc illæ Lacrymæ!—I fear:
The song that once could charm the r***l sense,
Delights, alas! no more the royal ear.
Gods! can a guinea deaden ev'ry note,
And make the nightingale's a raven's throat?
Fresh from my brain's prolific mint—
Suppose we Amateurs should, in a fury,
Just take it in our John-Bull heads to say
(And lo! 'tis very probable we may)—
‘We will have oratorios at Drury?’
And think such speech an insult on his rank:
What could he do?—oppose with ire so hot?
I think his m*****y had better not !
About an oratorio or a play:
It puts him on a footing with the rabble,
And that's unkingly, let me say.
For such a victory he ought to sigh—
But, Lord! suppose it so should come to pass,
That majesty comes off with a black eye?
The world will christen it a paltry fray.
They never are, some wiseacres declare.—
Poh! such a speech may do for birth-day song;
But makes us philosophic people stare!
Not quite a hundred miles from Windsor town,
Who harbour'd of his neighbour horrid notions—
A widow gentlewoman—who, he said,
Popp'd from her window ev'ry day her head
Impertinent, to watch his royal motions.
To take my motions by surprise—
But, whip! the woman's head at once is out,
To see and hear what we are all about:
I'll cure her of that trick—and block her up.’
For fortifying ev'ry place,
From dockyards to a necessary house—
The m****ch dreamt of nothing but the wall—
The saucy spy in petticoats to maul,
And make her eagle pride crawl like a louse.
To block up the poor widow Jones—
Who mark'd this dread blockade, and, with a frown—
And to the cause of freedom true—
One of the old hen's chicks so blue,
Fast as the k*** built up, the dame pull'd down.
Much did the country with the battle ring,
Between the valiant widow and the k***,
That admiration rais'd in Windsor town:
The mighty battling Broughtons and the Slacks,
Ne'er knew more money betted on their backs.
Just as it happens, faith, nine times in ten,
When dames so spirited engage with men—
That is—th' heroic widow won the day:
But found himself most shamefully defeated;
Then, very wisely, he retreated,
And, very prudently, gave up the wall.
Us'd by the dame in her besieg'd condition,
That on the host of vile invaders flew;
Say, did no god nor goddess cry out shame!
And nobly hasten to relieve the dame
From such a resolute and hostile crew?
Join'd the poor Widow Jones, and ran up stairs;
Then fiercely caught up certain earthen wares,
And, pleas'd his fav'rite element to find,
Bid, on their heads, the briny torrents flow,
And wash'd, like shags, the combatants below.
Rush'd to the widow's house, and join'd the party:
But say, what ammunition fill'd her hand,
Fame for the widow to acquire,
To bid the enemy retire,
And give to public scorn the daring band?
Heard as a secret—therefore must not tell;
Nor would he for a thousand pounds reward
To beaux reveal it, or the sweetest belle.
Yet nature possibly hath made a snout,
Blest with sagacity to smell it out.
Thy gaping attitude provokes my laugh—
Thou thinkst that monarchs never can act ill:
Get thy head shav'd, poor fool! or think so still.
I value not a rush.
Wilt have another?—‘No.’—Nay, prithee do.—
‘I won't.’—Thou shalt, by Heavens! so prithee hush!
My lady muse, shall talk of kings and pride.
Children, that all of us see ev'ry day—
Brats that kick, squall, and quarrel with their pap,
Tearing, and swearing they will have their way:
And what, too, their great reputation rifles,
Kings quarrel, just like children, about trifles.
For kingly worship to be kick'd by fellows
Mending old kettles or old bellows.
Much pleas'd with people's scraping, bowing, kneeing,
Fruitful in egotisms, and full of brags—
Her ladyship in nought can brook denial;
And, as for insult, 'tis a killing trial,
And more especially from men of rags.
Rather than feel the kickings of an ass,
Would calmly put up with a leg of horse;
Though pelting her with fifty times the force;
Nay, though her brains came out upon the ground,
Were brains within her head-piece to be found.
Sir Watkyn is a member of the ancient music concert in Tottenham Street, and much attended to, both for his art and science.
The oratorios were to have been performed at Drury Lane, this year, under the conduct of Mr. Linley and Dr. Arnold. Madame Mara was to have exhibited her amazing powers. This would have been a death-stroke to the pigmy performance in Tottenham-court Road. How should the pigmy be saved? By killing the giant—and lo! his death-warrant hath been signed.—By what power of the constitution? None!—Can the Grand Monarque do more? Quicquid delirant reges, plectuntur Achivi.
Indeed his m*****y hath prudently taken the hint. Drury, in spite of the royal frown, hath had her oratorios performed, to the no small mortification of poor deserted Tottenham.
Yet let us give an instance of wrong proceedings. A certain k***and q****, instead of having concerts at their palace, in the style of other princes, such as the king of France, the emperor, the empress of Russia, &c. have entered into a private subscription for a concert in a pitiful street. They pay their six guineas a-piece; and, what is more extraordinary, get in their children, as we are told, gratis! What is still more extraordinary, they have entered into a bond for borrowing two thousand pounds for putting the house into a decent repair; fit for the reception of the k*** of the first empire upon earth. Of whom has this money been borrowed?—Marvelling reader! of the poor musicians' fund!—which money might have been placed out to a much superior advantage. Let me add, that the subscribers order a formal rehearsal previous to every concert; so that, in fact, they get a double concert for their money;—undoubtedly to the vast satisfaction of the fingers of the happy Cramer, Borghi, Shield, Cervetto, &c., who, in this instance, earn their money not very unlike the patient and laborious animal called a drayhorse.
A KING AND A BRICK MAKER .
A TALE.
Did very much a neighbouring brick-kiln hate,
Because the kiln did vomit nasty smoke;
Which smoke—I can't say very nicely bred—
Did very often take it in its head
To blacken the great house, and try the k*** to choke.
Upon a windy day,
I'll make the rascal and his brick-kiln hop—
P*x take the smoke—the sulphur!—zounds!—
It forces down my throat by pounds—
My belly is a downright blacksmith's shop.’
He could not bear it, and thus bawl'd aloud:
‘Go,’ roar'd his m*****y unto a page,
Work'd, like a lion, to a dev'lish rage,
‘Go, tell the rascal who the brick-kiln owns,
That if he dares to burn another brick,
Black all my house like hell, and make me sick,
I'll tear his kiln to rags, and break his bones.’
On which the brickmaker—a little bold,
Exclaim'd, ‘He break my bones, good master page,
He say my kiln shan't burn another brick,
Because it blacks his house and makes him sick!
Billy, go, give my love to master's rage,
And say, more bricks I am resolv'd to burn;
And if the smoke his worship's stomach turn,
Tell him to stop his mouth and snout—
Nay more, good page—his m*****y shall find
I'll always take th' advantage of the wind,
And, dam'me, try to smoke him out.’
From a poor ragged rogue that dealt in mud;
Yet, though so impudent a thing,
The fellow's rhet'ric could not be withstood.
This brickmaker went tooth and nail to work,
And form'd a true Vesuvius on the eye:
The smoke in pitchy volumes roll'd along,
Rush'd thro' the royal dome with sulphur strong,
And, thick ascending, darken'd all the sky.
Indignant reader, what dost think?
The fellow scrap'd the filthiest stuff together,
Old wigs, old hats, old woollen caps, old rugs,
Replete with many a colony of bugs,
Old shoes and boots, and all the tribe of leather.
The building for the Lord's anointed made,
Thus was this man of mud and straw employ'd,
And at the thought so wicked, overjoy'd,
Of smoking God's vicegerent like a herring;
Thought, with green peas, a dish extremely fine;
But, lo! this baneful rogue of brick
Fell, for his sov'reign, fortunately sick,
And, ere the wretch could glut his spleen and pride,
By turning monarchs into bacon—died.
Of sharp and prudent œconomic kings,
Who rams, and ewes, and lambs, and bullocks feed,
And pigs of every sort of breed:
Who sell skim milk, and keep a guard so stout
To drive the geese, the thievish rascals, out,
That ev'ry morning us'd to suck the cows :—
For such as wholesome vegetables want;—
Who feed, too, poultry for the people's sake,
Then send it through the villages in carts,
To cheer (how wondrous kind!) the hungry hearts
Of such as only pay for what they take.
Singeth commercial treaties—commutation—
Olympian dew, gloves, sticking plaster, hats,
Quack medicines for sick Christians, and sound rats,
And all that charm our eyes, or mouths, or noses.
Of virtuous, gracious, good, uxorious kings,
Who love their wives so constant from their heart;—
Who down at Windsor daily go a-shopping—
Their heads so lovely into houses popping,
And doing wonders in the hagling art.
Purchase a comb, or corkscrew, lace for cloaks,
Edging for caps, or tape for apron-strings,
Or pins, or bobbin, cheap as other folks?
I tell thee farthings claim the royal care!
Farthings are helpless-children of a guinea:
If not well watch'd they travel to their cost!
For, lo! each copper-visag'd little ninny
Is very apt to stray, and to be lost.
Extravagance I never dar'd defend—
The greatest kings should save a candle-end:
The more, indisputably, they must have,
Crown'd heads, of saving should appear examples;
And Britain really boasts two pretty samples!
Of sweet excisemen, an obliging train;
Who, like our guardian-angels, watch our houses,
And add another civil obligation
That addeth greatly to our reputation—
Hug, in our absences, our loving spouses.
Now, as thou dost admire the true sublime,
And, consequently, my immortal rhime,
'Tis clear thou never canst desire my death.
If that's the case then, reader, so might I.
Let me, then, join thy wishes—stay my rapture,
And nurse my lungs to sing a second chapter.
Mr. Warton says in his Ode, ‘Who plant the civic bay;’ but he assuredly meant cabbages and carrots:—the fact proves it.
IN CONTINUATION.
‘Grant me an honest fame, or grant me none,’Says Pope (I don't know where), a little liar;
Who, if he prais'd a man, 'twas in a tone
That made his praise like bunches of sweetbriar,
Which, while a pleasing fragrance it bestows,
Pops out a pretty prickle on your nose.
Were some folks to exclaim, who fill a throne,
‘Grant me an honest fame, or grant me none;’
Such princes were upon the forlorn hope,—
Soon, very soon, to reputation dead;
Their idle laureats, faith, might shut up shop,
And bid their lofty genius go to bed.
Muse, this is all well said; but, not t'offend ye,
I beg you will not cultivate digression—
Plead not the poet's quidlibet audenti;
For surely there are limits to th' expression:
Then cease to wanton thus in episode,
And tell the world of Mr. Warton's Ode.
The modern poet, Laureat Thomas says,
To Botany's grand island tunes his lays,
Fix'd for the swains and damsels of St. Giles,
Whose knowledge in the hocus-pocus art
Bids them from Britain somewhat sudden start,
To teach to southern climes their ministerial wiles:
And teach the simple natives how to steal:
The picklock sciences, so dark, explain;
And to ingenious murder turn each brain.
Quoth Tom again—the modern poet sings
Of sweet, good-natur'd inoffensive kings;
Who, by a miracle, escap'd with life—
Escap'd a damsel's most tremendous knife;
A knife that had been taught, by toil and art,
To pierce the bowels of a pie or tart.
Thus, having giv'n a full display
Of what our laureat says, or meant to say;
I'll beg of Thomas to instruct my ears,
Why, in his verses, he should call
The knights who grac'd the high-arch'd hall,
A set of bears ?
Are not entitled to a little praise,
Who for God's cause did palace, house, and hut sell;
As well as monarchs of the present date,
Whose dear religion, of which poets prate,
Might lodge, without much squeezing, in a nutshell?
‘What king hath small religion?’ thou repliest—
‘If G***** the Th*** thou meanest—bard, thou liest.’
Hold, Thomas—not so furious—I know things
That add not to the piety of ------.
I've seen a K. at chapel I declare,
Yawn, gape, laugh, in the middle of a pray'r—
When inward his sad optics ought to roll,
To view the dark condition of his soul;
Catch up an opera-glass, with curious eye,
Forgetting God, some stranger's phiz to spy,
Had Christian features to the visage giv'n;
Then turn (for kind communication, keen)
And tell some new-found wonders to the queen.
Thus have these eyes beheld a cock so stately
(Indeed these lyric eyes beheld one lately),
Lab'ring upon a dunghill with each knuckle:
When after many a peck, and scratch, and scrub,
This hunter did unkennel a poor grub,
On which the fellow did so strut and chuckle;
He peck'd and squinted—peck'd and kenn'd agen,
Hallooing lustily to Madam Hen;
To whom, with airs of triumph, he look'd round,
And told what noble treasure he had found.
‘Ah! Peter, Peter,’ Laureat Thomas cries,
‘Thou hast no fear of kings before thy eyes;
Great—little—all with thee are equal jokes,
And mighty monarchs merely common folks.
Ah wicked, wicked, wicked Peter, know—’
Know what? ‘That monarchs are not merely show;
Souls they possess, and on a glorious scale:’
To this I answer, Thomas, with a tale.
A duke of Burgundy (I know not which)
Thus on a certain time address'd a poet:—
‘I'm much afraid of that same scribbling itch—
You've wit—but pray be cautious how you show it;
Say nothing in your rhimes about a king—
If praise, 'tis lies—if blame, a dangerous thing.’
That is, the duke believ'd the king, uncivil,
Might kick the saucy poet to the devil.
T. W.
Peter, there's odds 'twixt staring and stark mad—
P. P.
Who dares deny it?—So there is, eg ad!
Thou thinkst no prince of common sense possest—
P. P.
On Stanislaus the muse could pour her strain,
Who, dying, sunk a sun upon Lorraine:
Too like the parted sun, with glory crown'd—
He fill'd with blushes deep th' horizon round.
Fred'rick the Great, who died the other day,
Had for himself, indeed, a deal to say:
We must not touch upon that king's belief—
Because I fear he seldom said his pray'rs—
Nor dare we say the hero was no thief,
Because he plunder'd ev'ry body's wares.
I'm told the emperor is vastly wise—
And hope that Madam Fame hath told no lies:
Yet, in his disputations with the Dutch,
The monarch's oratory was not much:
Full many a trope from bayonet and drum
He threaten'd—but, behold! 'twas all a hum.
The pride and envy of the German nations—
People of fashion, worship, wealth, and state—
Lo! what demand for them, in heav'n, of late!
As fine a soldier, faith, as ever started—
Whom death did almost dread to lay his claws on—
Old captain what's his name?—Saxehilberghausen ;
For whom (with zeal, for folks of worship, burning)
We once again are black'ned up by mourning;
To show by glove, cloth, ribband, crape, and fan,
A peck of trouble for th' old gentleman.
Our q**** hath got of uncles, aunts, and cousins!
Egad, if thus those folks continue dying,
Each Briton, doom'd to dismal black,
Must always bear a hearse-like back,
And, like Heraclitus, be always crying.
Much, in her humour, like our good Queen Bess;
Who keeps her fair court dames from getting drunk ;
And all so temperate herself, folks say,
She scarcely drinks a dozen drams a day;
And, in love matters, is a queen of spunk.
Such heroines, in a matrimonial strife,
Might hammer from one's tender head hard notes:
I own my delicacy is so great,
I cannot, in dispute, with rapture, meet
Women who look like men in petticoats.
By way of answer one might have a slap—
P'rhaps on a simple petticoat or gown—
Nay! possibly on madam's being kiss'd!
And really I would rather be knock'd down
By weight of argument, than weight of fist.
On battles, sieges, mortars, and great guns—
The milder beauties win my soften'd soul,
Who look for fashions with desiring eyes:
Pleas'd when on têtes the conversations roll,
Cork rumps, and merry thoughts, and lovers' sighs.
I hate a woman, like a sentry-box;
Whose hard face holds an oath in ev'ry feature.
No galloping horse-godmothers for me.
I own I cannot brook such manly belles
As Mademoiselle d'Eons, and Hannah Snells:
Yet men there are, (how strange are Love's decrees!)
Whose palates ev'n jack-gentlewomen please.
That triumph in a love-inspiring air;
Superior beaming ev'n where thousands shine—
Thy form!—where all the tender graces play,
And, blushing, seem in ev'ry smile to say,
‘Behold we boast an origin divine!’
With rev'rence let me hail that charming queen,
Bliss to her king, and lustre to her race;
Though Venus gave of beauty half her store,
And all the graces bid a world adore—
Her smallest beauties are the charms of face.
T. W.
Heav'ns! why abroad for virtues must you roam?
P. P.
Because I cannot find them, Tom, at home.
At an assembly at Petersburgh, some years since, which was honoured with the presence of the empress, one of the rules was, that no lady should come drunk into the room.
(Whose actions smile contempt on scandal's tales)
Ranks in the muse's favour high—
I wish some folks, that I could name with ease,
Blest with his head—his heart—his pow'rs to please—
Then Pity's soul would cease from many a sigh!
The crouching courtiers, that surround a throne,
And learn to speak and grin from one alone,
Are ready now, if horsewhipp'd from their places,
At Carlton House to show their supple faces,
And call the prince they vilify a God.
T. W.
Thinkst thou not Cæsar doth the arts possess?
P. P.
Arts in abundance!—Yes, Tom—yes, Tom—yes!
T. W.
Thinkst thou not Cæsar would each joy forego,
To make his children happy?
P. P.
No, Tom—no,
T. W.
What! not one bag, to bless a child, bestow?—
P. P.
The sordid souls that avarice enslaves,
Would gladly grasp their guineas in their graves:
Like that old Greek—a miserable cur,
Who made himself his own executor.
She licks so lovingly their mouths and chins:
At ev'ry danger, lord! how puss is frighted—
She curls her back, and swells her tail, and grins,
Rolls her wild eyes, and claws the backs of curs
Who smell too curious to her children's furs.
But when grown up, alas! how chang'd their luck!
No more she plays, at bo-peep with her breed,
Lies down and, mewing, bids them come and suck:
Plays with their twinkling tails, and licks their furs;
But when they beg her blessing and embraces,
Spits, like a dirty vixen, in their faces.
She watches the dear babes with squinting eye;
And if she spies them with a bit of meat,
Springs on their property, and steals their treat.—
The dev'l for her may eat 'em at a meal—
With all her soul;—the jade, so wondrous saving,
Cries, ‘Off! you now are at your own beard-shaving.’
Th' intelligence is good, I make no doubt;
Who really love their offspring when they're young,
But lose that fond affection when they're stout;
Far off they send them—nor a sixpence give:
I wonder, Thomas, where such m******hs live!—
And for thy flatt'ry offer butts of sack;
Say plainly that he would disgrace thy lay;
And turning on him thy poetic back,
Bid, like a porcupine, thine anger bristle;
Nor damn thy precious soul to wet thy whistle.
CONCLUSION.
By numbers, I assure you, deem'd sublime;
Or that thy laureat's place my spleen provokes:
The king (good man!) and I should never quarrel,
Ev'n though his royal wisdom gave the laurel
To Mr. Tom-a-Stiles, or John-a-Nokes.
I never sigh'd for glory's high degrees:
This very instant should our Grand Monarque
Say, ‘Peter, be my laureat, if you please;’
With sweetest diffidence and modest grace:
‘The office suits a more ingenious man, sir;
In God's name, therefore, let him have the place:
Unlike the poets, 'tis my vast affliction
To be a miserable hand at fiction.
Acrostic, rebus, or conundrum-maker,
Who oft hath rode on Pegasus so fiery,
And won the sweepstakes in the Ladies Diary;
Such, Sire, in poetry shall hitch your name,
And do sufficient justice to your fame.’
AN APOLOGETIC POSTSCRIPT TO ODE UPON ODE.
HORACE.
Performeth most extraordinary things!
THE ARGUMENT.
Peter nobly acknowledgeth Error, suspecteth an interfering Devil, and supplicateth his Reader.—He boasteth, wittily parodieth, and most learnedly quoteth a Latin Poet—He showeth much Affection for Kings, illustrating it by a beautiful Simile—Peter again waxeth witty—Resolution declared for Rhime in consequence of Encouragement from our two Universities—Peter wickedly accused of King-roasting; refuteth the malevolent Charge by a most apt Illustration—Peter criticiseth the Blunders of the Stars—Peter replieth to the Charges brought against him by the World—He displayeth great Bible Knowledge, and maketh a shrewd Observation on King David, Uriah, and the Sheep, such as no Commentator ever made before—Peter challengeth Courtiers to equal his Intrepidity, and proveth his Superiority of Courage by giving a delectable Tale of Dumplings—Peter answereth the Unbelief of a vociferous World—Declareth totis viribus love for Kings—Peter peepeth into Futurity, and telleth the Fortune of the Prince of Wales
I thought that I had work'd up all my rhime
What stupid demon hath my brain possess'd?
I prithee pardon me this time:
'Tis not a vast extent of road:
Together let us gallop then along:
Most nimbly shall old Pegasus, my hack, stir,
To drop the image—prithee hear more song
Some ‘more last words of Mr. Baxter.’
Sublimely great are Peter's pow'rs of song:
His nerve of satire, too, so very tough,
Strong without weakness, without softness rough.
The marv'ling world of Peter's tongue may say;
His tongue, so copious in a flux of metre,
‘Labitur et labetur!’
ODE.
World! stop thy mouth—I am resolv'd to rhime—I cannot throw away a vein sublime:
If I may take the liberty to brag,
I cannot, like the fellow in the Bible,
Venting upon his master a rank libel,
Conceal my talent in a rag.
Kings must continue still to be my theme—
Eternally of kings I dream:
As beggars ev'ry night, we must suppose,
Dream of their vermin, in their beds;
Because, as ev'ry body knows,
Such things are always running in their heads.
Besides—were I to write of common folks,
No soul would buy my rhimes so strange, and jokes:
Then what becomes of mutton, beef, and pork—
How would my masticating muscles work?
Indeed, I dare not say they would be idle,
But, like my Pegasus's chops, so stout,
Who plays and wantons with his bridle,
And nobly flings the foam about;
So mine would work—‘On what?’ my reader cries,
With a stretch'd pair of unbelieving eyes—
Heav'n help thy most unpenetrating wit!
On a hard morsel—Hunger's iron bit.
By all the rhiming goddesses and gods
I will—I must, persist in odes—
And not a pow'r on earth shall hinder—
‘Peter, it is a glorious road to fame;
‘Eugè poeta magne—well said, Pindar?’
The violence of the Universities on this occasion may probably arise from the contempt thrown on them by his majesty's sending the royal children to Gottingen for education; but have not their majesties amply made it up to Oxford by a visit to that celebrated seminary—and is not Cambridge to receive the same honour?
And cry, ‘O Peter what a want of grace
Thus in thy rhime to roast a king?’
I roast a king! by heav'ns 'tis not a fact—
I scorn such wicked and disloyal act—
Who dares assert it, says a sland'rous thing.
Hear what I have to say of kings—
If, unsublime, they deal in childish things,
And yield not, of reform, a ray of hope;
Each mighty monarch straight appears to me
A roaster of himself—Felo de se—
I only act as cook, and dish him up.
Reader! another simile as rare—
My verses form a sort of bill of fare,
Informing guests what kind of flesh and fish
Is to be found within each dish;
That eating people may not be mistaken,
And take, for ortolan, a lump of bacon.
Whenever I have heard of kings
Who place in gossipings, and news their pride,
And knowing family concerns—mean things!
Very judiciously, indeed, I've cry'd,
‘I wonder
How their blind stars could make so gross a blunder!’
In purple rich—of state so full,
They should have had an apron on,
And, seated on a three-legg'd stool,
Commanded of dead hair, the sprigs
To do their duty upon wigs.
By such mistakes, is nature often foil'd:
Such improprieties should never spring—
Thus a fine chattering barber may be spoil'd,
To make a most indiff'rent king.’
‘Sir, sir,’ I hear the world exclaim,
‘At too high game you impudently aim—
How dare you with your jokes and gibes,
Tread, like a horse, on kingly kibes?’
Folks, who can't see their errors, can't reform:
No plainer axiom ever came from man;
And 'tis a Christian's duty, in a storm,
To save his sinking neighbour, if he can:
Thus I to kings my ode of wisdom pen,
Because your kings have souls like common men.
The Bible warrants me to speak the truth—
Nor mealy-mouth'd my tongue in silence keep:
Did not good Nathan tell that buckish youth,
David the king, that he stole sheep?
Stole poor Uriah's little fav'rite lamb—
An ewe it chanc'd to be, and not a ram—
For had it been a ram, the royal glutton
Had never meddled with Uriah's mutton.
What modern courtier, pray hath got the face
To say to majesty, ‘O king!
At such a time, in such a place,
You did a very foolish thing?’
What courtier, not a foe to his own glory,
Would publish of his king this simple story?—
THE APPLE DUMPLINGS AND A KING.
Whipping and spurring,
Happy in worrying
A poor, defenceless, harmless buck
(The horse and rider wet as muck),
From his high consequence and wisdom stooping,
Enter'd, through curiosity, a cot,
Where sat a poor old woman and her pot.
In this same cot, illum'd by many a cranny,
Had finish'd apple dumplings for her pot:
In tempting row the naked dumplings lay,
When, lo! the monarch, in his usual way,
Like lightning spoke, ‘What's this? what's this? what? what?’
His eyes with admiration did expand—
And oft did majesty the dumpling grapple:
‘'Tis monstrous, monstrous hard, indeed,’ he cry'd:
What makes it, pray, so hard?’—The dame reply'd,
Low curt'sying, ‘Please your majesty, the apple.’
(Turning the dumpling round, rejoin'd the king),
‘'Tis most extraordinary then, all this is—
It beats Pinetti's conjuring all to pieces—
Strange I should never of a dumpling dream—
But, goody, tell me where, where, where's the seam?’
That folks did apple dumplings sew.’—
‘How, how the devil got the apple in?’
By which the apple lay so sly conceal'd,
Which made the Solomon of Britain start;
Who to the Palace with full speed repair'd,
And queen and princesses so beauteous scar'd,
All with the wonders of the dumpling art!
The wisdom of an apple-dumpling maker;
And, lo! so deep was majesty in dough,
The palace seem'd the lodging of a baker.
Thou art a courtier—roarest ‘Lies, lies, lies!’
Do, for a moment, stop thy cries—
I tell thee, roaring infidel, 'tis true.
May ask a foolish question now and then—
This is the language of all ages:
Folly lays many a trap—we can't escape it:
‘Nemo,’ says some one, ‘omnibus horis sapit:’
Then why not kings, like me and other sages?
Provided king-like they behave:
Kings are an instrument we need,
Just as we razors want—to shave;
To keep the state's face smooth—give it an air—
Like my Lord North's, so jolly, round, and fair.
I hate not royalty, Heav'n knows my heart.
Great George's children are my great delight;
The sweet Augusta, and sweet Princess Royal,
Obtain my love by day, and pray'rs by night.
Upon the Edwards, Harrys of our isle—
Great souls! in virtue as in valour try'd,
Whose actions bid the cheek of Britons smile.
And take a peep into Fate's book.
I hear the mingled praise of millions rise;
I see uprais'd to Heav'n their ardent eyes;
That for their monarch ask a length of days.
Behold fair fame his youthful temples crown
With laurels of unfading bloom;
Behold dominion swell beneath his care,
And genius, rising from a dark despair,
His long-extinguish'd fires relume.
Not those where all the littlenesses join—
Whose souls should start to find their lot a throne,
And blush to show their noses on a coin.
I now allude to kings of foreign nations.
The sole historians were of ancient days,
Who help'd their heroes fame's high hill to clamber
Penning their glorious acts in language strong,
And thus preserving, by immortal song,
Their names amidst their tuneful amber.
Preserving many a deed deserving fame,
Which that old lean, devouring shark, call'd Time,
In my opinion, far too rich a treat—
I therefore merit statues for my rhime.
‘But let grave wisdom, friend, thy verses rule;
Put out thine irony's two squinting eyes—
Despise thy grinning monkey, ridicule.’
Who acts like birch on boys at school,
Neglecting lessons—truant, perhaps, whole weeks!
My ridicule, with humour fraught, and wit,
Is that satiric friend, a gouty fit,
Which bites men into health and rosy cheeks:
Of ills that with them play the devil—
Like mercury that much the pow'r controls
Of presents gain'd from ladies over civil.
The ancients did so, therefore why not I?
Lo! for my good advice I ask no fees,
Whilst other doctors let their patients die;
A very selfish, wicked thing, I'm sure.
I never begg'd of him the smallest thing
For all the threshing of my virtuous brains;
Nay, were I my poor pocket's state t'impart,
So well I know my royal patient's heart,
He would not give me two-pence for my pains.
The news, if true, indeed, were very sad,
And far too serious an affair to mock it—
Yet how can this agree with what I've heard,
That so much by him are my rhimes rever'd—
He goes a-hunting with them in his pocket:
(In bacon hunting, or of bucks the race),
My verse so much his majesty bewitches,
That out he pulls my honour'd Odes,
And reads them on the turnpike roads—
Now under trees and hedges—now in ditches.
That strikes tremendous on my ear;
It says, great Arden, commonly call'd Pepper,
Of mighty George's thunderbolts the keeper,
Just like of Jupiter the famous eagle,
Is order'd out to hunt me like a beagle.
Unto thy lofty master, Mr. Jove,
And ask how it can square with his religion,
To bid thee, without mercy, fall on,
With thy short sturdy beak, and iron talon,
A pretty, little, harmless, cooing pigeon?
A monarch cannot so unwisely act!
Praying and pressing ministers for money;
Bidding them on our hive (poor bees!) be thumping,
Trying to shake out all our honey;
Pray, shan't we be allow'd to smile?
To cut a joke, or epigram contrive,
By way of solace for our plunder'd hive?
Who avaricious got himself bad fame,
By most unmannerly and thievish plunges
Into his subjects' purses,
A deep manœuvre that obtain'd their curses,
Because it treated gentlefolks like sponges.
Such goods and chattel-seizing,
They publish'd libels to display their hate,
To comfort, in some sort, their souls,
For such a number of large holes
Eat by this royal rat in each estate.
To hear such satires on the Grand Monarque,
And roar'd—‘Messieurs, you soon shall feel
My criticism upon your ballads,
Not to your taste so sweet as frogs and sallads,
A stricture critical yclep'd Bastile.’
Then swore par Dieu that he would quickly bring
Unto the grinding stone their noses down—
No, not a soul of 'em should ever thrive—
He'd flay them, like St. Bartlemew, alive—
Villains! for daring to insult the crown.
And, smiling on his loyalty so stout,
Replied, ‘Monsieur le Premier, you are wrong—
Don't of the pleasure let them be debarr'd—
You know how we have serv'd 'em—faith! 'tis hard
They should not for their money have a song.’
Unluckily transported for his rhimes,
Address'd his book before he bade it walk;
Therefore my worship, and my-ode,
In imitation of such classic mode,
May, like two Indian nations, have a talk.
Go, visit kings, queens, parasites, and lords;
And if thy modest beauties they adore,
Inform them, they shall speedily have more.’
‘Ode! Ode!—What? what? I hate your rhime haranguing
I'd rather hear a jackass bray:
I never knew a poet worth the hanging.
I'll teach the saucy knaves to laugh at kings:
Yes, yes, the rhiming rogues their songs shall rue,
A ragged, bold-fac'd, ballad-singing crew.
Yes, yes, the poets shall my pow'r confess;
I'll maul that spawning devil call'd the press.’
Tell him, O gentle Muse, this pithy story:
KING CANUTE AND HIS NOBLES.
A TALE.
That by a kind of royal necromancy,
He had the pow'r Old Ocean to control—
Down rush'd the royal Dane upon the strand.
And issued, like a Solomon, command—
Poor soul!
‘Touch not your lord and master, Sea,
For by my pow'r almighty, if you do’—
Then staring vengeance—out he held a stick,
Vowing to drive Old Ocean to Old Nick,
Should he ev'n wet the latchet of his shoe.
And look'd as if he'd drive him from the land—
Made for a moment a bold stand:
But to his honest waves he made a motion,
The orders seem'd a deal the waves to tickle,
For soon they put his majesty in pickle;
And set his royalties, like geese, a-swimming.
Soon did they make him wish himself on shore;
His head and ears most handsomely they dous'd—
Just like a porpus, with one general shout,
The waves so tumbled the poor king about—
No anabaptist e'er was half so sous'd.
Indeed more like a crab than like a king,
And found his courtiers making rueful faces:
But what said Canute to the lords and gentry,
Who hail'd him from the water, on his entry,
All trembling for their lives or places?
I've had with Mr. Sea a pretty bustle;
My treatment from my foe not over nice,
Just made a jest for ev'ry shrimp and muscle:
My lords, I thank you for your great opinion.
And bid me try another—for the rubber—
Permit me to inform you all, with shame,
That you're a set of knaves, and I'm a lubber.’
Which thou wilt bear—a sacred load!
Yet, much I fear, 'twill be of no great use:
Those who surround them, mostly rogues and fools,
And therefore can no benefit produce.
Undoubtedly were made for rogues and fools;
But this unluckily the simple fact is;
Those rogues and fools do nothing but admire,
And all so dev'lish modest, don't desire
The glory of reducing them to practice.
| The Works of Peter Pindar [i.e. John Wolcot] | ||