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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The Works of Peter Pindar [i.e. John Wolcot] | ||
SUBJECTS FOR PAINTERS.
Scene—the Royal Academy.I come not with hostility, but greeting—
Not eagle-like to scream, but dove-like coo it—
I come not with the sword of vengeance, rhime,
To slash, and act as journeyman to Time—
The God himself is just arriv'd to do it.
I come not with the shafts of satire sporting
Then view me not like Stubbs's staring horse,
With terror on the approaching lion snorting:
I come to bid the hatchet's labour cease,
And smoke with friends the calumet of peace.
And like some long-ear'd creatures, bray, ‘what art?’
Sir William, shut your ell-wide mouth of terror—
I come not here, believe me, to complain
Of such as dar'd employ thy building brain,
And criticise an œconomic error .
And bid thee seek again Palladio's school;
Or copy heav'n, who form'd thy head so thick,
To give stability to stone and brick;
No—'twould be cruel now to make a rout—
The very stones already have cry'd out.
And call thee for the workmanship hard names;
To point which wing shall next forsake the sky,
And tumble in the Strand, or in the Thames.
For putting clever Academic men ,
Like calves or pigs, into a pen,
To see the king of England and his dame,
'Midst peopled windows, chimneys and old walls;
'Midst marrowbones and cleavers, fife and flute,
Passing in pious pilgrimage to Paul's;
The rain, as if in mockery from the sky.
Dribbled on ev'ry academic nob,
And wash'd each pigtail smart, and powder'd bob:
Giving to each so picturesque an air;
Resembling that of drooping, rain-soak'd fowls,
Or, what's a better picture, parboil'd owls;
Whilst thou, great Jove upon Olympus aping,
Didst sit majestic, from a window gaping.
Which scowling marks the bard with doubt and fear;
Thy forms are sacred from my wrath divine;
'Twere cruel to attack such crippled creatures,
So very, very feeble in their natures,
Already gasping in a deep decline!
Too great my soul to bid the figures bleed:
No—peace and happiness attend 'em;
Where'er they go, poor imps, God mend 'em.
Of over dealing in the true sublime;
I scorn with malice thus thy fame to wound;
Nor cruel to declare, and hurt thy trade,
That too divine effects of light and shade
Were ever 'midst thy labours to be sound.
That elegance, expression, spirit,
Too strongly from the canvass blaze;
And damn thee thus with Raphael's praise:
Besides, against the stream I scorn to rush;
The world ne'er said, nor thought it of thy brush.
‘Here lies below a painter's clay,
Who work'd away most furiously for kings,
And prov'd that fire of inclination,
For pleasing the great ruler of a nation,
And fire of genius, are two different things.’
Who shine not yet upon the R. A. list,
That limbs in spasms and crack'd and goggling eyes,
With grandeur cannot well exist.
Convulsions cannot give the true sublime.
Peace to the manes of that capering saint;
Yet let me tell the sons of paint,
Sublimity adorneth not his dance.
Will only make a good abortion.
Sleep, golden skies and bulls, and golden cows,
And golden groves and vales, and golden sheep,
And golden goats, the golden grass that brouse,
As beat the very golden frame.
Peace to the scenes of Birmingham's bright school!
Peace to the brighter scenes of Pontypool!
With modesty's companion sweet, a blush,
And hesitation nat'ral to her tongue:
And eye so diffident, with beam so mild,
Like Eve's when Adam on her beauties smil'd,
And led her blushing, nothing loath, along,
To give the lady a green gown so sweet,
On beds of roses, love's delicious seat.
To this great dome
To offer subjects to the sons of paint;
Accept the pleasant tales and hints I bring,
Of knight and lord, and commoner and king,
Sweeter than hist'ry of embowell'd saint:
Or martyr beat like Shrovetide cocks with bats,
And fir'd like turpentin'd poor roasting rats.
Or wind and rain to powder'd wigs,
Or mud from kennels to a milk-white stocking;
Hostile to Peter's phiz as if a pest,
Why springs the man of hist'ry, Master West,
And cries, ‘Off, off! your tales and hints are shocking;
Kings, and the world besides, thy spite despise!
Sir, every stupid stanza shows it;
Sir, you know nothing of a king and queen;
In spheres too high their orbs superior roll
By thy poor little grov'lling, mole-ey'd soul,
Thou outcast of Parnassus! to be seen.
The two first luminaries of the nation,
So meek, good, gen'rous, virtuous, humble, wise;
Whilst thou a savage, a great fool so fat,
Curs'd with a conscience blacker than my hat,
Art rival to that fiend the prince of lies.
A whisper, Hopkins, Sternhold, in thy ear:
King Lear, to mortify thee, goes
Where majesty delights with West to prate,
Much more than ministers of state,
Where thou shalt never show thy nose!
Thou foul-mouth'd fellow, to repeat thy rhime;
Where ev'ry cook, it is my firm belief,
Would nobly make it a religious point,
Rather than put thy trash upon a joint,
To let the fire consuming burn the beef.
That would not hang thee, shoot thee, stab thee, drown,
That doth not damn thy stuff, thy odes and tales;
That doth not think thy odes would give disease
To ev'ry thing they wrapp'd—to bread, to cheese,
Nay, give contagion to a bag of nails.
The very Windsor owls and bats,
Like thee a raggamuffin in the street.
Some pointing brooms, and some a scornful mop,
Their loyal sentiments would disembogue,
And taunting cry, “there goes a lying rogue.”
Consummate insolence thy verse provoke!
Fool! to believe thy muse a muse of fire,—
A chimney-sweeper's drab, a muse of smoke.
Nay, Nichols' magazine exceeds in spirit:
A printer's devil with conceit so drunk,
Who publishes for gentleman and trunk;
Bowyer, whose pen recorded all the raps
That hungry authors gave to Bowyer's door,
To swell the curious literary store:
A founder'd, broken-winded hack,
Rides out to find old farthings, nails, and bones—
On darkest coins the brightest legend reads,
On traceless copper sees imperial heads,
And makes inscriptions older than the stones.
A Druid altar from a pigsty rise.
Yes, Nichols, aping wisdom through his glasses,
Thee, thee Apollo's scavenger, surpasses.
Mean thro' the prison grate for farthings angling,
Suspending feet of stockings by a string,
Or glove or nightcap for our bounty dangling:
(Thy pale nose poking through thy prison hole),
The hollow voice of mis'ry will be heard,
“Kind ge'mman, pity a poor hungry soul;
Good lady, put a farthing in the stocking!’
Arm'd with a winking light of paltry rush,
As if with truth's bright torch, into our room!
To dart on ignorance the fancied rays—
To bid of barbarism the empire blaze,
And kind illumine error's midnight gloom.
A dog is better company than thee.’
For thoughts so kind, and prettily exprest
Yet won't I be refused, I won't, indeed;
You must, you shall have tale, and ode, and hint;
This memory of mine contains a mint;
And thus, in bold defiance, I proceed.
Their names are sacred from the poet's spleen—
Peace to their reign! they feel no more my jokes,
Whether to Hanover they wisely roam,
Or full as wisely count their cash at home,
My satire shall not hurt the gentlefolks.
I sigh not for the ven'son of a throne:
Nay, slavery doth not with my pride agree;
A toad eater's an imp I don't admire;
Nor royal small-talk doth my soul desire—
I've seen my sovereigns—that's enough for me.
A large portion of the Royal Academy, raised at an extraordinary expense, fell to the ground lately; but as the knight is a favourite at court, no harm is done. The nation is able to rear it again, which will be a benefit ticket in Sir William's way.
Sir William actually gave orders for the nonadmission of the Royal Academicians into the academy, to see the royal procession to St. Paul's, as he had some women and children of his acquaintance who wished to see the show. Half a dozen boards were; consequently ordered to be put together on the outside of the building for their reception.
To give the artist beef and fame:
Where, 'midst his tulips, grin stone apes with parrots,
Where Neptune foams along a bed of carrots,
Instead of cleaving through his native brine.
Where love o'er garlic waves his purple wings,
Where Mars to vanquish beets heroic leans:
And, arm'd with lightnings, with terrific eyes,
The great and mighty Ruler of the skies,
Sublimely thunders through a bed of beans;
And Dutchmen to their knees in onions skaiting.
Swallowing, alas! a bitter, bitter pill;
Eating, poor man, his own sad words,
Exceedingly against his noble will;
Commandeth him to swallow with a grace;
Would make an interesting scene, indeed,
And show the courage of King Charles's breed!
Of some poor puling child a dose of salts,
At which its little soul revolts,
With wriggling limbs, wry mouths, and piteous note;
Yet forc'd to take the formidable purge,
Or taste a bitt'rer dose, the threat'ned scourge!
Sprinkling his ravelins o'er the nation;
Improving thus the nature of great guns;
Guns blest with double natures, mild and rough,
To give a broadside, or a pinch of snuff.
Or Richmond at the enormous reck'ning struck,
At Portsmouth battling hard about a duck.
Hugging her husband in her cat-like clutches,
Biting and tearing him with brandy zeal;
Whose flax in heaps is seen to fly around,
Whilst he, pale wight, emits a plaintive sound,
Like animals that furnish man with veal;
Showing the mettle of an arrant quean;
Longing to shine a first-rate star at court,
For satire's pen a subject of rare sport;
Longing to purify a luckless blood,
Deep-stain'd and smelling of its native mud.
Drawn as the glorious Macedonian youth;
In battle galloping o'er hills of dead,
Would glow with such an air of truth!—
Of old Bucephalus's breed.
The duke absolutely ordered cannon to be made of leather, from a snuff-box maker, which, at Woolwich, on Saturday the second day of May, 1789, were seriously tried, and, like many a nobleman, found too soft.
At Portsmouth his grace, not long since, bespoke a dinner for a few friends; and because no impression had been made on a roasted duck, Charles Lenox, Duke of Richmond, Earl of March, Master General of the Ordnance, Lord Lieutenant and Custos Rotulorum of the County of Sussex, Duke of Lenox in Scotland, and Aubigny in France, Knight of the most noble order of the Garter, &c., thought it a grievous imposition, and consequently ordered the landlord of the inn to deduct the eighteen pence, the price of the duck, from the bill, which was done accordingly.
Of Fame's and sweet St. Giles's blackguard bands,
That clap our kings to parliament and play—
Salisb'ry, too, gauging all their gaping throats,
Exciseman-like, to find the best for notes,
That money mayn't be thrown away:
To get full pennyworths of popularity;
Resolv'd his master shall be fairly treated,
And not, as usual, by his servants cheated.
A pretty opportunity to smile,
You paint the Solomon of yon fam'd place ,
Where fair philosophy, the heav'nly dame,
By barb'rous usage cover'd deep with shame,
No longer shows her exil'd face:
Where cent. per cent. in value rise,
Toads, tadpols, grasshoppers, and flies.
With many a parasitical dear guest,
Swoll'n by their flatt'ries like a bladder big,
Throwing away of learning such a waste,
And proving his superior classic taste,
By swallowing the sumen of a pig.
Imploring money for a king;
Telling most mournful tales of civil list,
The lady's tender heart to wring.
High price of blisters, bolusses, and pills,
Long journey to St. Paul's t'oblige the nation,
And give God thanks for restoration:
Britannia with arch look the while,
Partaking strongly of a smile,
Pointing to that huge dome , the nation's wealth;
Where people sometimes place their cash by stealth,
And all so modest with their secret store,
Inform the world they're poor, ah, very poor.
Sweet youths! for little Norman's favours sighing,
A picturesque effect would form;
That hugging mother for the daughter's charms
This with the yielding damsel in his arms,
Taking the citadel by storm;
That running with the girl in triumph off,
This with the dog, the mother, and the muff.
Compell'd to kneel and pray , who swore his pray'rs,
Patting the angry lawyer on the shoulder,
Declaring nought was ever bolder,
Admiring such a novel mode of sinning:
Which proves what blood-game infidels can dare;
Which to my mem'ry brings a fact,
Which nothing but an English tar would act—
For though so wicked, sailors think on Heav'n,
Particularly in a storm;
Where, if they find no brandy to get drunk,
Their souls are in a miserable funk,
Then vow they to th' Almighty to reform,
If in his goodness only once, once more,
He'll suffer them to clap a foot on shore.
They ne'er on week-days pester Heav'n with pray'rs;
For 'tis amongst the jacks a common saying,
‘Where there's no danger, there's no need of praying.’
To hear the parson preach and pray,
All but a boy, who, willing to forget
That pray'rs were handing out, had stol'n away;
And, thinking praying but a useless task,
Had crawl'd to take a nap, into a cask.
The boatswain's cat sagacious smelt him out;
Gave him a clawing to some tune—
This cat's a cousin German to the knout .
‘And save your damn'd young sinful soul:’
He then the moral-mending cat apply'd,
And turn'd him like a badger from his hole.
Although the boatswain flogging kept behind him:
‘Flog,’ cried the boy, ‘flog—curse me, flog away—
I'll go—but mind—God d*mn me if I'll pray.’
The Works of Peter Pindar [i.e. John Wolcot] | ||