University of Virginia Library

BIRTH-DAY ODE.

This day, this very day, gave birth
Not to the brightest monarch upon earth,
Because there are some brighter, and as big—
Who love the arts that man exalt to Heav'n—
George loves them also, when they're giv'n
To four-legg'd gentry, christen'd dog and pig ,
Whose deeds in this our wonder-hunting nation
Prove what a charming thing is education.

357

Full of the art of brewing beer,
The monarch heard of Mr. Whitbread's fame:
Quoth he unto the queen, ‘My dear, my dear,
Whitbread hath got a marvellous great name;
Charly, we must, must, must see Whitbread brew—
Rich as us, Charly, richer than a Jew:
Shame, shame, we have not yet his brewhouse seen.’
Thus sweetly said the king unto the queen!
Red hot with novelty's delightful rage,
To Mr. Whitbread forth he sent a page,
To say that majesty propos'd to view,
With thirst of knowledge deep inflam'd,
His vats, and tubs, and hops, and hogsheads fam'd,
And learn the noble secret how to brew.
Of such undreamt-of honour proud,
Most rev'rently the brewer bow'd;
So humbly (so the humble story goes)
He touch'd e'en terra firma with his nose;
Then said unto the page, hight Billy Ramus,
‘Happy are we that our great king should name us,
As worthy unto majesty to shew,
How we poor Chiswell people brew.’
Away sprung Billy Ramus quick as thought:
To majesty the welcome tidings brought:
How Whitbread staring stood like any stake,
And trembled—then the civil things he said—
On which the king did smile and nod his head;
For monarchs like to see their subjects quake:
Such horrors unto kings most pleasant are,
Proclaiming rev'rence and humility—
High thoughts too all those shaking fits declare
Of kingly grandeur and great capability!
People of worship, wealth, and birth,
Look on the humbler sons of earth,
Indeed in a most humble light, God knows!

358

High stations are like Dover's tow'ring cliffs,
Where ships below appear like little skiffs,
The people walking on the strand, like crows.
Muse, sing the stir that Mr. Whitbread made;
Poor gentleman! most terribly afraid
He should not charm enough his guests divine:
He gave his maids new aprons, gowns, and smocks;
And, lo! two hundred pounds were spent in frocks,
To make th' apprentices and draymen fine:
Busy as horses in a field of clover,
Dogs, cats, and chairs, and stools were tumbled over,
Amidst the Whitbread rout of preparation
To treat the lofty ruler of the nation.
Now mov'd king, queen, and princesses so grand,
To visit the first brewer in the land—
Who sometimes swills his beer and grinds his meat
In a snug corner christen'd Chiswell-street;
But oft'ner charm'd with fashionable air,
Amidst the gaudy great of Portman-square.
Lord Aylesbury, and Denbigh's lord also
His grace the duke of Montague likewise,
With Lady Harcourt, join'd the raree-show,
And fix'd all Smithfield's marv'ling eyes—
For, lo! a greater show ne'er grac'd those quarters,
Since Mary roasted, just like crabs, the martyrs.
Arriv'd, the king broad grinn'd, and gave a nod
To Mr. Whitbread, who, had God
Come with his angels to behold his beer,
With more respect be never could have met—
Indeed the man was in a sweat,
So much the brewer did the king revere.
Her Majesty contrived to make a dip—
Light as a feather then the king did skip,
And ask'd a thousand questions, with a laugh,
Before poor Whitbread comprehended half.

359

Reader! my ode should have a simile
Well! in Jamaica, on a tam'rind tree,
Five hundred parrots, gabbling just like Jews,
I've seen—such noise the feather'd imps did make
As made my pericranium ake—
Asking and telling parrot news:
Thus was the brewhouse fill'd with gabbling noise,
Whilst draymen, and the brewer's boys,
Devour'd the questions that the king did ask:
In diff'rent parties were they staring seen,
Wond'ring to think they saw a king and queen;
Behind a tub were some, and some behind a cask.
Some draymen forc'd themselves (a pretty luncheon)
Into the mouth of many a gaping puncheon;
And through the bung-hole wink'd with curious eye,
To view, and be assur'd what sort of things
Were princesses, and queens, and kings;
For whose most lofty station thousands sigh!
And, lo! of all the gaping puncheon clan,
Few were the mouths that had not got a man!
Now majesty into a pump so deep
Did with an opera-glass of Dolland peep,
Examining with care each wondrous matter
That brought up water—
Thus have I seen a magpie in the street,
A chatt'ring bird we often meet,
A bird for curiosity well known,
With head awry,
And cunning eye,
Peep knowingly into a marrow-bone.
And now his curious m*****y did stoop
To count the nails on ev'ry hoop;
And, lo! no single thing came in his way,
That full of deep research, he did not say,
‘What's this? hæ, hæ? what's that? what's this?
what's that?’

360

So quick the words too, when he deign'd to speak,
As if each syllable would break its neck.
Thus, to the world of great whilst others crawl,
Our sov'reign peeps into the world of small:
Thus microscopic geniuses explore
Things that too oft provoke the public scorn;
Yet swell of useful knowledges the store,
By finding systems in a pepper-corn.
Now Mr. Whitbread, serious did declare,
To make the majesty of England stare,
That he had butts enough, he knew,
Plac'd side by side, to reach along to Kew:
On which the king with wonder swiftly cry'd,
‘What, if they reach to Kew then, side by side,
What would they do, what, what, plac'd end to end?’
To whom, with knitted calculating brow,
The man of beer most solemnly did vow,
Almost to Windsor that they would extend;
On which the king, with wond'ring mien,
Repeated it unto the wond'ring queen:
On which, quick turning round his halter'd head,
The brewer's horse with face astonish'd neigh'd;
The brewer's dog too pour'd a note of thunder,
Rattled his chain, and wagg'd his tail for wonder.
Now did the king for other beers inquire,
For Calvert's, Jordan's, Thrale's entire—
And, after talking of these diff'rent beers,
Ask'd Whitbread if his porter equall'd theirs?
This was a puzzling, disagreeing question,
Grating like arsenic on his host's digestion;
A kind of question to the man of cask,
That not ev'n Solomon himself would ask.
Now majesty, alive to knowledge, took
A very pretty memorandum-book,

361

With gilded leaves of asses' skin so white,
And in it legibly began to write—

Memorandum.

A charming place beneath the grates,
For roasting chesnuts or potates.

Mem.

'Tis hops that give a bitterness to beer—
Hops grow in Kent, says Whitbread, and elsewhere.

Quære.

Is there no cheaper stuff? where doth it dwell?
Would not horse-aloes bitter it as well?

Mem.

To try it soon on our small beer—
'Twill save us sev'ral pounds a year.—

Mem.

—To remember to forget to ask
Old Whitbread to my house one day—

Mem.

Not to forget to take of beer the cask,
The brewer offer'd me, away.
Now having pencil'd his remarks so shrewd;
Sharp as the point, indeed, of a new pin;
His majesty his watch most sagely view'd,
And then put up his asses' skin.
To Whitbread now deign'd majesty to say,
‘Whitbread, are all your horses fond of hay?’
‘Yes, please your majesty,’ in humble notes,
The brewer answer'd—‘also, sir, of oats:
Another thing my horses too maintains—
And that, an't please your majesty, are grains.’

362

‘Grains, grains,’ said majesty, ‘to fill their crops?
Grains, grains—that comes from hops—yes, hops, hops, hops.’
Here was the king, like hounds sometimes at fault—
‘Sire,’ cry'd the humble brewer, ‘give me leave
Your sacred majesty to undeceive:
Grains, sire, are never made from hops, but malt.’
‘True,’ said the cautious monarch, with a smile:
From malt, malt, malt—I meant malt all the while.’
‘Yes,’ with the sweetest bow, rejoin'd the brewer,
‘An't please your majesty, you did, I'm sure.’
‘Yes,’ answer'd majesty, with quick reply,
‘I did, I did, I did, I, I, I, I.’
Now this was wise in Whitbread—here we find
A very pretty knowledge of mankind:
As monarchs never must be in the wrong,
'Twas really a bright thought in Whitbread's tongue,
To tell a little fib or some such thing,
To save the sinking credit of a king.
Some brewers, in the rage of information,
Proud to instruct the ruler of a nation,
Had on the folly dwelt, to seem damn'd clever!
Now, what had been the consequence? Too plain!
The man had cut his consequence in twain;
The king had hated the wise fool for ever!
Reader, whene'er thou dost espy a nose,
That bright with many a ruby glows;
That nose thou mayst pronounce, nay safely swear,
Is nurs'd on something better than small beer:
Thus when thou findest kings in brewing wise—
Or nat'ral hist'ry holding lofty station;
Thou mayst conclude with marv'ling eyes,
Such kings have had a goodly education.
Now did the king admire the bell so fine,
That daily asks the draymen all to dine;

363

On which the bell rung out, (how very proper!)
To show it was a bell, and had a clapper.
And now before their sovereign's curious eye,
Parents and children, fine, fat, hopeful sprigs,
All snuffling, squinting, grunting in their sty,
Appear'd the brewer's tribe of handsome pigs:
On which th' observant man, who fills a throne,
Declar'd the pigs were vastly like his own:
On which the brewer swallow'd up in joys,
Tears and astonishment in both his eyes,
His soul brimful of sentiments so loyal,
Exclaim'd—‘O heav'ns! and can my swine
Be deem'd by majesty so fine!
Heav'ns! can my pigs compare, sire, with pigs royal!’
To which the king assented with a nod:
On which the brewer bow'd, and said, ‘Good God!’
Then wink'd significant on Miss;
Significant of wonder and of bliss—
Who, bridling in her chin divine,
Cross'd her fair hands, a dear old maid,
And then her lowest curtsy made
For such high honour done her father's swine.
Now did his majesty so gracious say
To Mr. Whitbread, in his flying way,
‘Whitbread, d'ye nick th' excisemen now and then?
Hæ, Whitbread, when d'ye think to leave off trade?
Hæ? what? Miss Whitbread's still a maid, a maid?
What, what's the matter with the men?
D'ye hunt?—hæ, hunt? No, no, your are too old
You'll be lord may'r—lord may'r one day—
Yes, yes, I've heard so—yes, yes, so I'm told:
Don't, don't the fine for sheriff pay—
I'll prick you ev'ry year, man, I declare:
Yes, Whitbread—yes, yes—you shall be lord may'r.
Whitbread, d'ye keep a coach, or job one, pray?
Job, job, that's cheapest—yes, that's best, that's best—

364

You put your liv'ries on the draymen—hæ?
Hæ Whitbread?—You have feather'd well your nest.
What, what's the price now, hæ, of all your stock?
But, Whitbread, what's o'clock, pray, what's o'clock?
Now Whitbread inward said, ‘May I be curst
‘If I know what to answer first;’
Then search'd his brains with ruminating eye—
But e'er the man of malt an answer found,
Quick on his heel, lo, majesty turn'd round,
Skipp'd off, and baulk'd the pleasure of reply.
Kings in inquisitiveness should be strong—
From curiosity doth wisdom flow:
For 'tis a maxim I've adopted long,
The more a man inquires, the more he'll know.
Reader, didst ever see a water-spout?
'Tis possible that thou wilt answer ‘No.’
Well then! he makes a most infernal rout;
Sucks, like an elephant, the waves below,
With huge proboscis reaching from the sky,
As if he meant to drink the ocean dry:
At length so full he can't hold one drop more—
He bursts—down rush the waters with a roar
On some poor boat, or sloop, or brig, or ship,
And almost sinks the wand'rer of the deep:
Thus have I seen a monarch at reviews
Suck from the tribe of officers the news,
Then bear in triumph off each wondrous matter,
And souse it on the queen with such a clatter!
I always would advise folks to ask questions—
For truly, questions are the keys of knowledge:
Soldiers—who forage for the mind's digestions—
Cut figures at th' Old Bailey, and at college;
Make chancellors, chief justices, and judges,
E'en of the lowest green-bag drudges.
The sages say, Dame Truth delights to dwell,
Strange mansion! in the bottom of a well—

365

Questions are then the windlass and the rope
That pull the grave old gentlewoman up:
Damn jokes then, and unmannerly suggestions,
Reflecting upon kings for asking questions .
Now having well employ'd his royal lungs
On nails, hoops, staves, pumps, barrels, and their bungs,
The King and Co. sat down to a collation
Of flesh, and fish, and fowl of ev'ry nation.
Dire was the clang of plates, of knife and fork,
That merc'less fell like tomahawks to work,
And fearless scalp'd the fowl, the fish, and cattle,
Whilst Whitbread, in the rear, beheld the battle.
The conqu'ring monarch, stopping to take breath
Amidst the regiments of death,
Now turn'd to Whitbread with complacence round,
And, merry, thus address'd the man of beer—
‘Whitbread, is't true? I hear, I hear
You're of an ancient family—renown'd—
What? what? I'm told that you're a limb
Of Pym , the famous fellow Pym:
What, Whitbread, is it true what people say?
Son of a round-head are you? hæ? hæ? hæ?
I'm told that you send Bibles to your votes—
A snuffling round-headed society—
Pray'r-books instead of cash to buy them coats—
Bunyans, and Practices of Piety:
Your Bedford votes would wish to change their fare—
Rather see cash—yes, yes—than books of pray'r:
Thirtieth of January don't you feed?
Yes, yes, you eat calf's head, you eat calf's head.’

366

Now having wonders done on flesh, fowl, fish,
Whole hosts o'erturn'd—and seized on all supplies
The royal visitors express'd a wish
To turn to House of Buckingham their eyes:
But first the monarch, so polite,
Ask'd Mr. Whitbread if he'd be a knight.
Unwilling in the list to be enroll'd,
Whitbread contemplated the knights of Peg,
Then to his generous sov'reign made a leg,
And said, he was afraid he was too old.
He thank'd, however, his most gracious king,
For offering to make him such a thing.’
But ah! a diff'rent reason 'twas I fear!
It was not age that bade the man of beer
The proffer'd honour of the monarch shun:
The tale of Marg'ret's knife, and royal fright,
Had almost made him damn the name of knight,
A tale that farrow'd such a world of fun.
He mock'd the pray'r too by the king appointed
Ev'n by himself the Lord's anointed—
A foe to fast too, is he, let me tell ye;
And, though a Presbyterian, cannot think
Heav'n (quarrelling with meat and drink)
Joys in the grumble of a hungry belly!
Now from the table with Cæsarian air
Up rose the monarch with his laurel'd brow,
When Mr. Whitbread, waiting on his chair,
Express'd much thanks, much joy, and made a bow.
Miss Whitbread now so quick her curtsies drops,
Thick as her honour'd father's Kentish hops;
Which hop-like curtsies were return'd by dips
That never-hurt the royal knees and hips;

367

For hips and knees of queens are sacred things,
That only bend on gala days
Before the best of kings,
When odes of triumph sound his praise.
Now through a thund'ring peal of kind huzzas,
Proceeding some from hir'd and unhir'd jaws,
The raree-show thought proper to retire;
Whilst Whitbread and his daughter fair
Survey'd all Chiswell-street with lofty air,
For, lo, they felt themselves some six feet higher!
 

The dancing dogs and wise pig have formed a considerable part of the royal amusement.

This alludes to the late Dr. Johnson's laugh on a great personage, for a laudable curiosity in the queen's library some years since.

His majesty here made a mistake—Pym was his wife's relation.

For the miraculous escape from a poor innocent insane woman, who only held out a small knife in a piece of white paper, for her sovereign to view.

When his majesty goes to a playhouse, or brewhouse, or parliament, the lord chamberlain provides some pounds-worth of mob to huzza their beloved monarch. At the playhouse about forty wide-mouthed fellows are hired on the night of their majesties' appearance, at two shillings and sixpence per head, with the liberty of seeing the play gratis. These Stentors are placed in different parts of the theatre, who immediately on the royal entry into the stage box, set up their howl of loyalty; to whom their majesties, with sweetest smiles, acknowledge the obligation by a genteel bow, and an elegant curtsy. This congratulatory noise of the Stentors is looked on by many, particularly country ladies and gentlemen, as an infallible thermometer, that ascertains the warmth of the national regard.