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] | ![]() |
THE RIGHTS OF KINGS,
OR LOYAL ODES TO DISLOYAL ACADEMICIANS.
ANACREON. Thus for a mighty monarch to be levell'd!
Pray were you drunk, or mad, sirs, or be-devill'd?
PROËMIUM.[_]
TO THE READER.
GENTLE READER,
The foundation of the following Odes is simply
this—The President of the Royal Academy,
happy to be able to gratify our amiable monarch in
the minutest of his predilections, reported lately to
the academicians his majesty's desire, that a Mr.
Laurence might be added to the list of R. A.'s, his
majesty, from his superior knowledge in painting,
being perfectly convinced of this young artist's uncommon
abilities, and consequently fair pretensions
to the honour. Notwithstanding the royal wish, and
the wish of the President, and (under the rose!!!)
the wish of Mr. Benjamin West, the Windsor oracle
of paint, and painter of history, the R. A.'s received
the annunciation of his majesty's wish, Sir Joshua's
wish, Mr. West's wish, with the most ineffable sang
froid, not to call it by the harder name, disgust.
The annunciation happening on the night of an
election of Associates, at which Mr. Laurence ought
to have been elected an Associate (a step necessary
to the more exalted one of R. A.)—behold the obstinacy
of these royal mules!—the number of votes
in favour of Mr. Laurence amounted to just three,
and that of his opponent, Mr. Wheatley, to sixteen!!!
—Indignant and loyal reader! the lyric Muse, who
has uniformly attacked meanness, folly, impudence,
avarice, and ignorance, from her cradle, caught
fire at the above important event, and most loyally
poured forth the following Odes, replete with their
usual sublimities.
GENTLE READER,
The foundation of the following Odes is simply this—The President of the Royal Academy, happy to be able to gratify our amiable monarch in the minutest of his predilections, reported lately to the academicians his majesty's desire, that a Mr. Laurence might be added to the list of R. A.'s, his majesty, from his superior knowledge in painting, being perfectly convinced of this young artist's uncommon abilities, and consequently fair pretensions to the honour. Notwithstanding the royal wish, and the wish of the President, and (under the rose!!!) the wish of Mr. Benjamin West, the Windsor oracle of paint, and painter of history, the R. A.'s received the annunciation of his majesty's wish, Sir Joshua's wish, Mr. West's wish, with the most ineffable sang froid, not to call it by the harder name, disgust. The annunciation happening on the night of an election of Associates, at which Mr. Laurence ought to have been elected an Associate (a step necessary to the more exalted one of R. A.)—behold the obstinacy of these royal mules!—the number of votes in favour of Mr. Laurence amounted to just three, and that of his opponent, Mr. Wheatley, to sixteen!!! —Indignant and loyal reader! the lyric Muse, who has uniformly attacked meanness, folly, impudence, avarice, and ignorance, from her cradle, caught fire at the above important event, and most loyally poured forth the following Odes, replete with their usual sublimities.
TO THE PUBLIC.
Modest as Addington our Speaker,
Amidst Saint Stephen's patriotic clan,
Where Innocence so meek did ne'er look meeker;
He turn'd about his pretty Speaker's head,
One leg just rais'd to hop into the chair;
Just like a cat in rain amid the street,
That fears to wet her white and velvet feet,
Which for a handsome gutter-leap prepare!
Said Mister Speaker, with a lamb-like voice!
‘I have but one step more,’ he cried,
Keeping his head coquettishly aside.
(Christie, a public speaker too, so prais'd),
Looking around him, simpering, smiling, bowing,
Then crying—‘Gemmen, going, going, going!’
With dove-like mien, and ground-exploring eye;
When lowly he did majesty beseech
T' allow his humble Commons use of words;
That is to say, a liberty of speech:
Because a confab royal is a treat;
Indeed for subjects much too rich,
As wise King James asserted of the itch:
Because a bailiff is a meddling rogue,
Who, with a hand of iron, or a stick,
Stoppeth the travels of our men of vogue!
Barbarian act, that men of worship frets!
Who think of loftier things than idle debts;
Deep pond'ring ever on the nation's good,
Not on great greasy butchers, tailor knaves,
Mercers and clammy grocers—compter slaves,
Who, by their stinking sweat, procure their food.
Crutches for Fortune in a deep decline:
Lo what a tradesman's good for, and lo all—
A wooden buttress for a tott'ring wall!
Most brutally by bailiffs dragg'd along;
For turnpike, furniture, or house's hire,
Horse, wages, coach, or some such idle song!
Belongs to people of no—occupation;
Who cannot (in their looks we read it)
Get, for a mutton-chop, a little credit!
Poor gentlemen! how hard, alas! their fate,
To knuckle to such nuisances of state!
Quitting my fav'rite rambling strain;
Leaving belov'd, admir'd, ador'd digression,
So practis'd by us men of ode-profession,
And sneaking fancy quits the lyric lay.
Licentious, slander'd crown-and-sceptre men!
‘Readers, one moment look me in the face;
A poet not quite destitute of grace;
And answer one not bred in Flatt'ry's schools—
Are you, or are you not, a set of fools!
Pinning your faith on Grandeur's sleeve—
Say, do you, in your consciences, believe
That m---s never can be weak nor mean;
And that a m---'s wife, yclept a ------,
May not (and why not?) be a downright slop,
Form'd of the coarsest rags of Nature's shop?
I read the answer in each visage’—‘No.’
‘O Jesu! can it be? and is it so?
Put down my book—
Give it not one contaminating look:
I stare on you with pity—nay, with pain—
Kearsley shall toss your money back again:
Get your crowns shav'd, poor souls—I wish you well—
And hear me—Bedlam has a vacant cell.’
When tainted by a king-deriding clan;
But now I curse those tenets o'er and o'er—
A convert quite—a sweet and alter'd man:
To royalty's stern port I learn to kneel—
For royalties are deem'd most sacred things;
So sacred by the courtiers, that the Bible
May be inform'd against, and prov'd a libel,
For saying—‘Put no confidence in kings!’
As much was coin'd by Popish priests and friars;
For ah! how hard 'tis for imagination
To fancy monarchs hypocrites and liars!
ODE TO THE ACADEMICIANS.
Alas! in waking's favour lie the odds!
The dev'l it is! ah me! 'tis really so!
How, sirs! on majesty's proud corns to tread!
Messieurs Academicians, when you're dead,
Where can your impudencies hope to go?
It smells of treason—on rebellion borders!
'Sdeath, sirs! it was the queen's fond wish as well,
That Master Laurence should come in!
Against a queen so gentle to rebel!
This is another crying sin!
So sweet a queen, and such a goodly king!
At disappointment so unus'd to start—
So full of dove-like gentleness her heart,
As if the dove had lent its softest feather,
That heart of gentleness to form,
Unus'd (as I have said) to opposition-storm!
That kings and potentates, both great and small,
Most instantaneous too must be compliance;
Refusal is most damnable defiance;
They struggle for't, like children for the rattle.
We whip a bantling when it kicks and cries,
Fully determin'd not to please it;
But lo! the children that possess a crown
(Young Herculeses) knock us down,
And, angry for the bauble, seize it.
Poor wretch, how oft his eyes with lightnings dance;
How he looks up to master for a smile!
Shakes his imploring head with wriggling tail,
Now whining yelps, now pawing to prevail,
Eager with such anxiety the while;
Lord, how the animal begins to caper!
But you are strangers to these humble things.
For shame! upon the courtier's creed go look—
And take a leaf from humble Hawksb'ry's book;
Or sweet neck-bending water-gruel Leeds,
Who majesty with pap of flatt'ry feeds;
Which pap, if highly relish'd, will of course,
Rewarded, make him Master of the Horse.
A blockhead, not a better watch to keep
In this most solemn, most important hour!
Why heard we not the thunder of his voice;
Saw down your gullets cramm'd the royal choice,
So easy to the iron arm of power?
So form'd to knock unruly rascals down?
Ah me! Prerogative seems nearly dead!
Behold his tott'ring limbs and palsied head;
His teeth dropp'd out; and hark! his voice so weak;
A mouse behind the wainscot—eunuch squeak!
‘Ah! non sum qualis eram,’ now he sighs.
To ev'ry body's call, ah! now so pliant!
Sad skeleton of once a sturdy giant!
Art thou that bully once—Prerogative?
Where is the mien of Mars, the eye's wild stare,
A meteor darting horror with its glare?
How like a brandy-drinker, who on flame
Feeds with a rosy beacon-face at first;
But, by his enemy Intemp'rance curst,
Yields to that victor of mankind with shame;
Pale, hobbling, voiceless, crawling to decay,
Just like a passing shadow, sinks away!
The maids of honour all on fire;
Nay, though despotically shav'd, the cooks,
Bluff on th' occasion, put on bull's-beef looks:
And really this is very grand behaving,
So nobly to forgive the famous shaving!
And though no fav'rite of the king,
She cries, ‘By Got, it shock and make my hair
Upright—it is so dam dam saucy ting.’
And Price's ghost, with eloquence's charms,
Will, from his tomb upspringing, sound applause:
But know, I deem not so of Edmund Burke:
He nobly styles the deed, ‘a d*mn'd day's work;’
Superior he to cutting royal claws.
Should be to kings a sort of humble hack;
That ev'ry subject ought to wear a saddle,
O'er which those great rough-riders, kings, may straddle.
ODE II.
At this disgrace of our fair isle:
Messieurs Fayette the Great and Co.
With tears of joy will overflow,
And order the assembly of the nation
To send you sweet congratulation.
Compar'd to kings, a grampus and a shrimp!
Like London mack'rel, all alive!
Tureens of flatt'ry are prepar'd so hot
By courtiers—a delicious pepper-pot;
Which, to be sure, the royal maw devours,
Kings boasting very strong digestive pow'rs.
Half starv'd, and longing for a steak;
Behold him now turn'd loose so wild to eat—
Gods! how he gobbles down the broth and meat!
As I have hinted, a fine pepper-pot:
With stare and wonder in all sorts of shapes;
Attentions darting from the full-stretch'd eye,
That not a royal glance may pass unheeded by:
Attentions sharp as those of Lumpy, Small,
At cricket skill'd to catch the flying ball;
Whilst you survey (abominable thing!)
With cold contempt the character of king!
Think of the patronage to painters all!
Not a poor shallow rill confin'd to West,
But torrents that like Niagara fall.
And pours his fost'ring rains upon his plants.
Then, meeting such a friend, you ought to cry
‘Glory be to George on high!’
As oft it happens, 'mid their walks in air;
Though one be rich, the other poor
In rare electric matter, how they greet!
With what delight they seem to meet;
And, pleas'd, with all the fire of friendship roar.
Sends you rare pictures for improvement yearly;
Buys up your works, and much commission gives
To hist'ry, portrait, landscape men—
Careful as of her chicken a good hen:
Thus like an alderman each limner lives,
To warm, protect you with parental shade:
But you, a flock of vile rebellious chicken,
Are all for mounting on your mother's back,
With threat'ning beak and noisy saucy clack,
Her eyes out, trying to be picking;
This is undutiful beyond all bearing.
Where'er the plaintive cry of want appears,
Cock'd, like a greyhound's, are the king's two ears:
Ready for such poor wights to bake and brew!
A circumstance believ'd by very few!
Thus, to philosophy's surprise,
A pin can lead the lightning of the skies!
ODE III.
Tremble, ye rogues, and tremble all the nation!
Suppose he takes it in his royal head
To strike your academic idol dead;
Knock down your house, dissolve you in his ire,
And strip you of your boasted title—'squire!
You always make that iron hot;
For then it asks but little force and skill—
Its sturdiness is quite forgot:
Make him red-hot, and bend him as you can:
So widely diff'rent are the metals,
Composing man, or kings indeed, and kettles!
Oft from the fascinating dairy flown,
To raise the arts with all his mighty pow'rs,
And hold high converse with the folks of town:
On nobler works than those of love, intent,
Æneas from the widow Dido went,
And full of piety, put off to sea!
I say agen,
Idly you deem'd yourselves the first of men;
And then
You spurn'd the hand which rais'd you into notice—
By all the gods, unfortunately, so 'tis!
Too often ruin'd by her glitt'ring toys,
Just like the candle's luckless wick
Surrounded by the lustre that destroys.
ODE IV.
Rebellion chills me into stone;
‘Tell not in Gath the tale,
Nor publish in the streets of Ascalon.’
There (thanks to education for't)
Submission cow'ring creeps, with fearful eye,
Unceasing bends the willowy neck to ground,
In rev'rence, abject and profound,
Too humbly modest to behold the sky:
To study royal Humour's various fits;
With wings expanded, ready to fly post,
To east, to west, to north, or south,
To cater for a monarch's mighty mouth,
To get him bak'd, or grill'd, or broil'd, or roast:
Which full-fed London ev'ry moment sp---s:
Then to the palace the rich treasure bears,
And pours the whole into the royal ears.
Sweeter than Philomela's sweetest song,
Says unto majesty such things!
Tells him that Cœsar won not half his fame;
That Alexander was a childish name
Compar'd to his—the King of Kings!
With such a brace of wonder-looking eyes,
On all the words from majesty that dart;
As if bright gems, as large as eggs of pullet,
Flow'd from the king's Golconda gullet,
Enough, indeed, to load a cart:
Wide as the port-hole of a seventy-four!
Drawn by an amateur I ween:
The outline chaste, and easy flowing;
The colouring not a whit too glowing.
Such, such is Adulation, charming maid!
Whose conduct you won't copy, I'm afraid.
ODE V.
At such the royal mind revolts;
Hates it as much as sticks the cats and curs,
Or curbs, and whips, and spurs, high-mettled colts.
Molehills, instead of mountains, in your eyes:
'Tis wrong!
I often rev'rence Grandeur in my song.
Soon as the soldiers cry aloud, ‘Make way!’
How gloriously the courtiers strut it by,
In gorgeous clothes of silk and gold,
With such an elevated front, and bold,
With such state-consequence in either eye;
So stiff, so stake-like, all the pompous pack,
As though Dame Nature had forgot to put
The joints of manners to the neck and back.
And lo! I'd lay considerable odds,
That man who ne'er divinities did spy,
Would really take them for a pack of gods!
Still they are folks of worship—still great men;
Although not one inch broad their minds, I ween:
The utmost boundary of all their knowledge,
The Game-act and John Nichol's Magazine.
Beings we little people should revere!
'Tis nat'ral to revere the folk on high;
To rev'rence, lo! our infancies are led!
Well do I recollect how oft my eye
Ador'd the kings and queens of gingerbread:
Who rode so far to see, and to be seen:
Though hungry as a hound, with pence in store,
When in their glory on the stalls I met 'em;
Though longing to devour them o'er and o'er,
I deem'd it sacrilege to eat 'em!
ODE VI.
But still it shows us the right way:
Indeed, the gentlewoman makes, no blaze,
No bonfire tempting a fool's eyes to gaze—
A modest dame, remote, and calm, and coy,
And never playeth gambols to destroy.
Amidst her trackless wilds immers'd in shade,
To tempt the silly and unwary!
Her meteor, lo! she lights!—here, there,
Up, down, she dances it—now far, now near,
In mad and riotous vagary.
And love of this same garish light;
All on a sudden goes this meteor out;
And caught, like badgers, in the sack of night,
Blund'ring and trying to get back agen,
They roll about in vain, poor men.
You are those badgers, gentlemen, indeed!
A revolution spirit, 'mongst mankind:
A spark will now set kingdoms in a blaze,
That would not fire a barn in former days;
So lately turn'd to touchwood is each state—
So whimsical, indeed, the ways of Fate!
Did ever you make cuckoldom your study?
P'rhaps not, if rightly I divine—
But, gentlemen, I've made it mine.
Is not a situation of betweenity,
As some word-coiners are dispos'd to call't—
Meaning a mawkish, as-it-were-ish state,
Containing neither love nor hate—
A sort of water-gruel without salt.
All smell, all taste, and, faith! all feeling—
His senses sharp as those of cats appear,
To right, to left—as quick as soldiers wheeling,
To catch a wife's bad fame, alas! not praise;
Thus setting traps to squeeze his future days;
And making lovely Life one lengthen'd sigh:
A pair of antlers his—he sits on thorns—
He nothing sees but horns, horns, horns!
On either side his head a horn appears
Are only one huge pair of ass's ears.
Our m*****h means not to invade your rights:
It never, never was a royal plan—
‘For Brutus is an honourable man!’
Greater from Chambers should be all your fears,
Whose house is tumbling fast about your ears.
ODE VII.
He rais'd the building with your cash and mine:
But what is wealth? what thousands? trifling things!
To swell the mighty volume of its fame,
He call'd it royal—thus he gave the name;
Which proveth the munificence of kings—
Heav'ns, what a present! ah, well worth possessing!
Lo! on a level with a bishop's blessing!
Would quit affairs of state, to hunt a fly:
But we have no such trifle-hunting kings—
Europe knows no such miserable things!
Her princes gallop on a larger scale;
No flippant minnow, but the flound'ring whale!
Not to destroy he cometh—but to save:
Not like Dame Nature, who composes forms
The fairest for the fascinated eye;
Then sends her lightnings, floods, and storms,
To bid the beauteous flowrets die!
In God's name let her bloom for ever!
Who, with that ease a farmer skirts his land,
Furrows so cruelly o'er the fairest face!
Relentless as a Mohawk, on he goes,
Cuts up the lily and the rose,
Roots up each wavy curl, and bends the neck of grace—
The sweetest lips would give me many a kiss.
It seems as though Time did not like his work;
As though he wanted something better still,
Than e'er was manufactur'd at his mill.
In Mesdames Johnson's , Kelly's , Windsor's shop,
Or rather hot-house!—Lord, if fond of billing,
What grace, for guineas, we may find!
Nay, in the streets, if cheapness suits our mind,
We purchase Cleopatras for a shilling!
Born, thou sweet witch, thy poet to beguile!
Thy fool, idolator, by night, by day,
He feels a chain in ev'ry smile.
Thou tyrant of my heart, let go my pen
I must, will speak to academic men.
Dart on your puny forms, his eye of flame,
And wanton, just to exercise his might
(Deeming you no ignoble game),
Should pounce on your owl-backs, so stout,
How would a cloud of feathers fly about!
The thunder of his beak, for falling, ripe—
What figures you would cut within his gripe!
Yet, though of pow'r so full, he will not show it.
Too soon your band its weakness would deplore!
A crab in a cow's mouth—no more!
Where lurks the burning blush of shame?
Alas! that symptom of remaining grace
Knows not to tinge an academic face!
Sons of the dev'l like you, rebellious, hear—
It is for kings to burden—us to bear.
‘Be not, O king, as usual, over-nice:
Dread sire, (to take a phrase from Caliban)
“Bite 'em”—
To pour a heavier vengeance on the clan,
Knight 'em.’
ODE VIII.
Which a good looking-after doth require—
Too much inclin'd to prove an evil;
A fire that needeth to be well secur'd,
Well iron'd, pinion'd, and immur'd,
Which otherwise would play the devil:
Yet if on politics a bard may prate,
I deem their monarch's jacket rather strait.
Mesdames Poissardes, 'twas shockingly ill bred,
To fling your flounders at your monarch's head.
Though, Venus-like, descended from the flood,
'Twas base, ye sweet divinities of mud.
To this great truth, a universe agrees,
‘He who lies down with dogs, will rise with fleas.’
I'm sure, from that arch-devil, Doctor Price,
For catching kings, like polecats, in a trap.
Like ropes should I consider laws;
Preventing, when I wish'd it, a good spring—
Hand-cuffs to bind my lion claws.
How can the Lord's anointed be unjust!
We never should believe such things
As doubt the wisdom of the King of kings:
What the Lord chooses must be good,
Although he sent us but a piece of wood.
Ev'n Chesterfield , that atheistic dog,
Declares he has a rev'rence for King Log.
‘When will that lucky day be born, that brings
A bridle for the arrogance of kings?
Too slowly moves, alas! the loit'ring hour.
When will those tyrants cease to fancy man
A dog in Providence's lev'ling plan,
To crouch and lick the blood-stain'd rods of pow'r?’
Such is your most unkingly cry—
And lo, I tell it with a sigh!
Which wanteth a good whip for a physician.
You keep bad company that turns your head—
So hungrily you ev'ry thing devour,
That tends to clip the wings of royal pow'r,
Which like the eagle's pinion ought to spread;
So greedily suck in Rebellion's breath,
That wafts the seeds of impudence and death.
A common-councilman, a beast,
On ev'ry season'd dish so hungry stuffs—
Unbuttons, wipes the sweat away, and puffs.
Asthma and apoplexy—and more ills
Than doctors, with their knowledges so stout,
Can vanquish with their bolusses and pills!
Attorney-general is no reasoning thing!
'Tis an indubitable fact,
This fellow is the creature of a king;
His eagle—thunder-bearer—loud his cry—
And ‘Instant vengeance’ is his sole reply.
'Tis dangerous to shake hands with such hard claws,
His gripe enough to make the bravest pause!
Buzzing opinions upon king and queen.
Ah! should he sally forth so strong,
Amidst your wantonness of speech and song;
Unlin'd by mercy, you will feel his gripe,
Stopping the melody of many a pipe.
When to their sports the insect nations pour:
Thoughtless of enemies in ambuscade,
Hums to night's list'ning ear the choral song,
And wantons through the boundless field of shade;
When, lo! the mouse-fac'd demon of the gloom,
Espying, hungry meditates their doom!
To honour, mercy, moderation, lost!
Behold him sally on the humming host,
And murd'rous overturn the tribes of gnat;
Nimbly from right to left, like Tippoo, wheel,
And snap ten thousand pris'ners at a meal!
ODE IX.
So prompt to drop to majesty the knee;
To start, to run, to leap, to fly;
And gambol in the royal eye!
And, if expectant of some high employ,
How kicks the heart against the ribs, for joy!
How liquidly the oil of flatt'ry flows!
But should the monarch turn from sweet to sour,
Which cometh oft to pass in half an hour,
How alter'd instantly the courtier clan!
How faint, how pale, how woe-begone, and wan!
In fancy holds her ever in his arms:
In madd'ning fancy, cheeks, eyes, lips devours;
Plays with the ringlets that all flaxen flow
In rich luxuriance o'er a breast of snow,
And on that breast the soul of rapture pours.
Gives to his lips his idol's sweetest kiss;
Bids the wild heart, high panting, swell its stream,
And deluge every nerve with bliss:
But if his nymph unfortunately frowns,
Sad, chapfall'n, lo, he hangs himself, or drowns.
Strive not to make your sov'reign frown—but smile:
Sublime are royal nods—most precious things—
Then, to be whistled to by kings!
Becoming thus the royal arm-upholder,
Oh, would some king so far himself demean,
As on my shoulder but for once to lean,
Th' excess of joy would nearly make me mad:
How on the honour'd garment I should doat—
And think a glory blaz'd around the coat!
In fancy glitt'ring with a thousand charms;
And show my children's children o'er and o'er:
‘Here, babies,’ I should say, ‘with awe behold
This coat worth fifty times its weight in gold:
This very, very coat, your grandsire wore!
‘Here majesty's own hand so sacred lay’—
Then p'rhaps repeat some speech the king might utter;
As—‘Peter, how go sheep a score? what? what?
What's cheapest meat to make a bullock fat?
Hæ hæ? what, what's the price of country butter?’
And deem my house adorn'd with immortality:
Thus should I make the children, calf-like, stare,
And fancy grandfather a man of quality:
And yet, not stopping here, with cheerful note,
The muse would sing an ode upon the coat.
Knows nought of smile and nod, and sweet hand-kissing;
Knows nought of golden promises of kings;
Knows nought of coronets, and stars, and strings:
In solitude the lovely rebel sighs;
But vainly drops the penitential tear—
Deaf as the adder to the woman's cries,
We suffer not her wail to wound our ear:
For food we bid her hopeless children prowl,
And with the savage of the desert howl.
ODE X.
I've said it often, and I think so still:
Doctrine to make the million stare!
Know then, each mortal is an actual Jove;
Can brew what weather he shall most approve,
Or wind, or calm, or foul, or fair.
Too fond of thunder, lightning, storm, and rain;
He hides the charming, cheerful ray
That spreads a smile o'er hill and plain:
Dark, he must court the scull, and spade, and shroud—
The mistress of his soul must be a cloud!
The God of Nature?—No such thing:
Heav'n whisper'd him, the moment of his birth,
‘Don't cry, my lad, but dance and sing;
Don't be too wise, and be an ape:—
In colours let thy soul be dress'd, not crape.
Yet, mind me—if, through want of grace,
Thou mean'st to fling the blessing in my face,
Thou hast full leave to tread upon a thorn.’
Poor imps, unhappy if they can't be curs'd—
For ever brooding over Mis'ry's eggs,
As though life's pleasure were a deadly sin;
Mousing for ever for a gin
To catch their happinesses by the legs.
However good the viands, and well dress'd:
Squint with a face of verjuice o'er each dish,
Fault the poor flesh, and quarrel with the fish,
Curse cook and wife, and, loathing, eat and growl.
Yet swear they cannot make a meal.
I like not the blue-devil hunting crew,
I hate to drop the discontented jaw,
O let me Nature's simple smile pursue,
And pick ev'n pleasure from a straw!
ODE XI.
To thrones, with due decorum make a leg;
Ev'n those are sacred, though but empty chairs:
There lurks in thrones a something, tho' but wood,
That thrills with awe the vulgar mass of blood,
And fills the mouth and eye with gapes and stares:
I wonder what's the meaning on't.
Who made all nations tremble at his nod;
Married Scarron's old widow, dry and frowsy;
Got deep in debt, the constable outran;
And, to complete the farce, this god-like man
Died—lousy !
There's somewhat marv'lous in it, I must own—
Lo, folly is not folly on a throne,
For whiting's eyes are di'monds in a king!
Against this mighty magic pow'r of kings:
Can wipe vulgarity from Brudenell's face;
Nor, though a whole eternity they try,
Blot art, infernal art, from H---ksb---y's eye;
Blot beast from S*lisb---y, who no legend needs,
Pertness from D---k, and vacancy from L---ds.
ODE XII.
And deemeth that he is admired again!
The king is wedded to it—'tis his home—
He watches it—and loves it, ev'n to pain:
And yet this lofty dome is heard to say,
‘Poh! poh! p*x take your love—away! away!’
Such bad behaviour puts me in a flame:
This is unseemly, nay, ungrateful carriage,
And brings to mind a little Ode to Marriage.
ODE TO HYMEN;
OR, THE HECTIC.
Of whom our Milton so divinely sings,
Once dove-tail'd to a devil of a wife—
Hymen, how comes it that I am so slighted?
Why with thy myst'ries am I not delighted,
Which I have tried to peep on half my life?
O put me speedily upon thy list!
A civil list, like that of kings, I'm told,
Bringing in swelling bags of glorious gold!
Against thee was I ever known to rail;
And say (abusing thus thy sweet dominion),
‘Curse me! if this boy's trap shall catch my tail?’
No! no!—I praise thy knot with bellowing breath,
Which, like Jack Ketch's, seldom slips till death.
Deep coughing by the taper's lonely light,
The hopeless Hectic rolls his eye-balls, sighing;
‘Sleep on,’ he cries, and drops the tend'rest tear;
Then kisses his wife's cherub cheek so dear:
‘Blest be thy slumbers, love! though I am dying:
Ah! whilst thou sleepest with the sweetest breath,
I pump for life, the putrid well of death!
I feel of Fate's hard hand th' oppressive pow'r;
I count the iron tongue of ev'ry hour,
That seems in Fancy's startled ear to say—
Soon must thou wander from thy wife away.’
Murm'ring deep melancholy on my ear:
And sullen—ling'ring, as if loth to part,
And ease the terrors of my fainting heart.
Yet, though I pant for life, sleep thou, my dove,
For well thy constancy deserves my love.’
His soft, fresh-blooming, incense-breathing bride,
Whose cheek the dream of rapt'rous kisses warms,
Anticipates her spouse's wish so good;
Feels love's wild ardours tingling through her blood,
And pants amidst a second husband's arms;
Now opes her eyes, and turning round her head,
‘Wonders the filthy fellow is not dead!’
ODE XIII.
Of painters, easily allow'd the prince—
The emp'ror, let me say, without a flattery:
Yet wantonly against this emp'ror, lo!
An overflowing tub of bile to show,
You foolish planted an infernal battery.
His thoughts so busy ever—all alive!
But here the simile will go no further;
For bees are making honey one and all;
Man's thoughts are busy in producing gall,
Committing, as it were, self-murther.
Sit easy on it, just like an old shoe—
When Disappointment sets my house in flame,
Let Reason all she can to quench it do:
Reason has engines plentiful and stout,
With water at command to put it out.
Themselves the fabricators of the strife;
For ever hunting, with a hound-like nose,
That hornet's nest, the tribe of woes:
And when the woes invited greet 'em,
They wonder how the dev'l they meet 'em.
ODE XIV.
Ah! could you, Pagans, after false Gods range?
Swop solid Reynolds for that shadow West?
In love-affairs variety's no sin—
Trav'lers may change at any time their inn—
Here 'tis paint-blasphemy, I do protest.
'Midst diff'rent climes to fix my throne:
David's physicians order'd change of dame —
And, lo! t'improve our cows, we bid 'em pass
Into variety of grass—
With bulls, I guess, th' advantage is the same.
To manufacture pieces of my joy,
I would not mad run counter to the fashion:
A little Sylvia, with the sweetest smile,
Possesses power some moments to beguile,
And in Elysium lap the prettiest passion.
Then pleasure soon would spread her wanton wing:
No! no! variety the game must start—
Come oft, and make her curt'sy to my heart;
And, like the orange girls, my taste to suit,
Cry, ‘Choice of fruit—fine fruit, sir—choice of fruit.’
So formal! changeless in its great broad brim:
Variety's a fine young playful cat—
A hopeful imp of spirit, sport, and whim;
Who, when all other objects fail,
Runs after its own tail.
The author has some reason to imagine that a part of the academic rebellion was meant to attack the president; the disappearance of whose works, in the present exhibition, has been fatal.—One picture from Sir Joshua's hand would have atoned for a host of daubs.
ODE XV.
That sceptred people meet with now-a-days!
All unmolested, lo! the virtues sleep!
Their roof with fair applause but rarely rings—
Sweet Panegyric moves with snail-like creep,
And Defamation on the lightning's wings!
You bless an opposition hour;
Too fond, alas! of roasting harmless kings;
Too well I know what freedoms you would take—
Beat the dear creatures just like bears at stake;
Just like a poor tame gull's, would clip his wings!
Forc'd from his bold aërial height,
Sweeping the sun amidst his flight,
To hop a garden, and hunt snails!
Whom Pity, with a sigh, surveys;
Whom Frenchmen daringly have laid a curb on;
Who now no more full royally indites,
No more ‘Sic volo’ to his kingdom writes,
But, ‘I'm your humble servant, Louis Bourbon.’
Shall lull no more an empire's idle groan:
Bastilles, those schools of peace and sweet morality,
Instruct no more the mob, and men of quality.
Surround the imps of liberty no more:
In dust each iron and colossal door,
Which clos'd in thunder on a rebel's room;
That pealing, with reverberated sound,
Rung through the caverns of the dread profound;
Where Meditation ponder'd, pensive maid!
And Horror, death-like, paus'd upon the shade.
The fount of honour, freedom, pension, place!
On me would kings their treasure fling away,
Most humbly grateful would I say,
‘Thus Lybia's forests a kind shade supply,
And for the meanest savage form a den;
And thus the mountains that invade the sky,
Kind, in their shaggy bosoms warm the wren.’
ODE XVI.
Your puny names shall scarce appear;
While those of kings, in characters sublime,
Shall, blazing, bid a world revere:
Their peerless acts, with ev'ry virtuous quality,
Shall grace the pyramid of Immortality.
As on a birth or coronation night,
Amidst the evening's honour'd shade,
Fast by the grocer's, or the chandler's shop,
Or lace, or pinman, or the man of mop,
By loyal thumb-bottles display'd!
That, burning with a rival glow,
Beam on the gaping multitude below.
He watches!—yes, he ponders through the night!
And lifts him from his darkness into light:
When Horror breathes upon the heaving deep,
Amid the wild and solemn roar;
These eyes have seen the crafty heron creep;
Now dart his beak so sharp for fish's blood,
And snatch a wriggling conger from the flood!
The king preserveth—but the fowl devours.
ODE XVII.
Which some contrition for your crime bespeaks,
And much-offended majesty implore:
Say, piteous, kneeling in the royal view—
‘Have pity on a sad abandon'd crew,
And we, great king, will sin no more:
Forgive, dread sir, the crying sin,
And Mister Laurence shall come in.’
May pardon gain from our good king and queen,
For they are not inexorable people;
Although you thus have run their patience hard;
And though you are, to such great folk compar'd,
Candle-extinguishers to some high steeple.
Can pardon, if you let them gain their cause;
So gracious, they will give you such kind looks,
As fell upon the shav'd and humble cooks;
Kind as a gard'ner's charitable eye
On some crush'd snail, or bird-lim'd fly;
Mingleth compassion with his bites.
I see him, all like vinegar so sour,
Look black!—but, still good-humour's in his soul,
And now I mark it, stealing forth so sweet—
Stream of forgiveness, what a treat!—
I see his eye, with love re-kindling, roll.
The sun, that youth of splendor, from his heav'n,
Drown'd ev'ry vale, and blasted ev'ry bloom;
Cast o'er poor Nature's smile a sable shroud,
Each beauty blotted with his inkiest cloud,
And giv'n a cheerful world to gloom:
Peeps from the op'ning west with timid air,
(Till forc'd by shouldering clouds away),
Informing man, ‘To-morrow will be fair.’
What trouble he had taken off your hands!
For art you had not rang'd the realm around!
His keener eye the precious gem had found!
Then, what an honour to have seen appointed,
Your very nightman, by the Lord's anointed!
ODE XVIII.
The muse's tittle-tattle must go on.—
It looks with rapture on a simple head,
Of puerilities the rich hot-bed,
So pleasing to the taste of Ridicule.
Rare crops! that, thick'ning into life,
Start, like asparagus, to tempt the knife.
Hawk-satire eyes it with the keenest look:
Still, should the owner hap to be a king,
Sharp for her quarry, how she prunes her wing!
Such is the proneness to assail great folk,
And make high birth and state a standing joke.
Call'd Envy, which alas! too many know!
The heart should be a medlar, not a crab;
Milk, and not verjuice, from its fount should flow:
But Greatness, sun-like, from the muddy stream,
Draws the foul vapour that obscures its beam!
Why strive I then, Quixotic to reform?
As soon a feather may the waves subdue,
And spiders bind the pinions of the storm.
Consid'ring man's so great a brute.—
Ev'n saints themselves have lost their reputation:
Rome formerly had thirty thousand gods;
And now, I warrant ye, 'tis odds,
They own scarce one through all the Romish nation.
Old rags, and hair, and marrow-bones?
Was stripp'd, poor gentlewoman, to her skin;
And, for religion, carried to the stews;
When, as the lady was so bare,
God gave her such a quantity of hair,
As reach'd unto her very shoes.
An angel from above commission'd came,
And spread around her such a heavenly light,
As dazzled every body's sight.
Wishing prodigiously to have a look,
Meaning to violate the dame so good;
Which meaning, when the Devil understood,
He choak'd the wanton rogue out-right.
Now, no more heeded than Tom Thumb.
TO MR. PITT.
Dear as to cormorants, of fish a shoal;
Dear to a German hog, as beds of beans;
Dear as a sixpence sav'd, to Mis'ry's soul:
Which Parliament, with tears of joy, survey'd;
Which brought about a much-desir'd salvation,
For which the doctors have been poorly paid:
By which more money humbly is implor'd—
‘More money for the children's education—
Hard times! more money for the children's board:’
Dear as a dock-leaf to a hungry ass;
Dear to the fam'd George Selwyn, as a pun;
Dear as to legs of mutton, caper sauce;
Dear as to hackney-coachmen signs of rain,
Who count their shillings in a coming cloud,
And, pious, pray for Noah's flood again;
So dear is prompt obedience to a king!
Far, of resistance be the trying hour!
God bless us! what a melancholy thing!
Quite counter to a gracious king's commands,
Behold! th' academicians, those strange fishes,
For Wheatley lifted their unhallow'd hands.
To play the spaniel, lick the foot, and fawn—
Oh, be their bones by tigers broken all!
Pleas'd, by wild horses could I see them drawn.—
Not make a poor associate!—such a thing!
Who try'd to tarnish thus the royal glory?
What rebel balloted against his king!
A cataract of charity, I'll say—
Inform me any body, if you can,
Unmark'd by liberality a day!
Through Chelt'nam, Weymouth, Exon, Plymouth, lo,
With joy his staring subjects all, so dear,
See from each step a stream of glory flow.
At night, on pavement gallops like the wind;
Fire kindling at his heels, behold him pass!
How bright the sparkles that hop out behind!
What mushrooms daily, to surprise us, start!
So nimbly the fair vegetable springs!
Such warmth prolific, can a smile impart!
Then perish ev'ry academic plant!
Oh, may they feel nor sun, nor fost'ring show'r!
Blow round them, O ye cold, cold winds of want!
Whose owners' necks will merit to be lopp'd!
With what sublimity they lift the head,
By Death and Ruin's Atlas-shoulders propp'd!
His eyes upon the sword of justice feast:
‘Curse on the pearl (he cries) by rapine stole;
Curse on the di'monds of the bleeding east!
Curse on the cruel hand (we hear him cry)
That steals the fruit of labour's honest toil,
And draws the tear of blood from Pity's eye!’
To suit this saucy, self-important crew?
How shall we smoke this academic hive,
That stinging makes us look so very blue?
Contract his open heart, of giant stature;
Use ev'ry species of little spite,
And violate for once his noble nature.
For downright brutes are Britons, nine in ten:
At curbs and whips behold us asses start,
And insolently claim the rights of men!
Yes, yes, they should be merciful, though strong.
As sceptres have been found in France with wings,
One would not lose an empire for a song.
![]() | The Works of Peter Pindar [i.e. John Wolcot] | ![]() |