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] | ![]() |
THERE is a little moral thing in France,
Call'd by the natives bienseance;
Much are the English mob inclin'd to scout it,
But rarely is Monsieur Canaille without it.
Call'd by the natives bienseance;
Much are the English mob inclin'd to scout it,
But rarely is Monsieur Canaille without it.
To bienseanee 'tis tedious to incline,
In many cases;
To flatter, par exemple, keep smooth faces
When kick'd, or suff'ring grievous want of coin.
In many cases;
To flatter, par exemple, keep smooth faces
When kick'd, or suff'ring grievous want of coin.
To vulgars, bienseance may seem an oddity—
I deem it a most portable commodity;
A sort of magic wand,
Which, if 'tis us'd with ingenuity,
Although an utensil of much tenuity,
In place of something solid, it will stand.
I deem it a most portable commodity;
A sort of magic wand,
Which, if 'tis us'd with ingenuity,
Although an utensil of much tenuity,
In place of something solid, it will stand.
For verily I've marvell'd times enow
To see an Englishman, the ninny,
Give people for their services a guinea,
Which Frenchmen have rewarded with a bow.
To see an Englishman, the ninny,
Give people for their services a guinea,
Which Frenchmen have rewarded with a bow.
Bows are a bit of bienseance
Much practis'd too in that same France;
Yet call'd by quakers, children of inanity;
But as they pay their court to people's vanity,
Like rolling-pins they smooth where'er they go
The souls and faces of mankind like dough!
With some, indeed, may bienseance prevail
To folly—see the under-written tale.
Much practis'd too in that same France;
Yet call'd by quakers, children of inanity;
But as they pay their court to people's vanity,
Like rolling-pins they smooth where'er they go
The souls and faces of mankind like dough!
With some, indeed, may bienseance prevail
To folly—see the under-written tale.
![]() | The Works of Peter Pindar [i.e. John Wolcot] | ![]() |