John and Dame | ||
“That hath not noble lustre in his eyes;
“Your England never did (nor never shall)
“Lie at the proud foot of a Conqueror.”
SHAKESPEAR.
JOHN AND DAME;
OR, THE LOYAL COTTAGERS.
PART I.
Must know and love this gentle pair;
The annals of whose blameless age,
And spotless youth is storied there.
Full oft has Autumn chang'd the leaf,
And now, for rustic toils too old,
In this small cot they seek relief.
Scatters its perfume round the place;
Nor ivy buds, nor honied flower,
The lattice wreathes with rural grace.
Affected ornaments for shew;
And not a vanity has Taste,
Made pure Simplicity to know.
A decent bed of dark moreen,
And ruddy floors, and whited wall,
And curtains of time-faded green:
And chairs of rush, and cupboard blue,
A goodly table and beaufet,
Are all that deck this cottage true.
Filling the chimney space so neat,
Tea-chest of fair mahogany,
And mantle-piece with posies sweet.
And all the village cluster there:
To John and Dame the neighbours come,
For all the village is their care.
As any in King George's land,
For Englishmen and women true,
Distinguish all the rural band.
And not an inch of ground will yield,
For, when I spake of Frenchman's slave,
They swore they still would keep the field.
At harvesting I heard them cry,—
“And where we work from night to morn,
“Dear fields! for you, we'll fight and die!”
And shook their reaping-hooks with glee,
And chorus'd bold the loud huzza,
And swore again “they would be free!”
“Because,” quoth they, “ere Frenchmen come,
“We best can shew them our intent,
“After a jolly harvest home.
“And bold and tall they rise to view,
“The deuce an ear shall Frenchman taste,
“Unless for one ear he pays two.”
Goes gaily forth from sheaf to sheaf,
And next, to him a round they quaff,
“Who first shall cashier Gallia's chief!”
Ply busily those sheaves between;
And joyful fill their little hands,
And eye the burnish'd heaps unseen.
The moral of each proverb old,—
That he who steals will come to shame,
While honesty with bags of gold
And true to trust in rags remain,
And should those sheaves e'er tempt to theft,
Will scorn to filch a single grain.
Of barley-bread, or darker rye,
Than whitest wheat-flower guilt can bake,
Or all that sinful arts supply.
At length the shades of night advance,
When homeward, as they wind their way,
They talk of fighting, and of France.
PART II.
And at John's ever-open door,
Awhile to gossip pause the train,
And thus their harmless day is o'er.
Have gladsome hail'd the orient sun,
From their short rest, the groups arise
Refresh'd—the self-same course to run.
His walk, where all these objects blend:
Explores the thickets, streams, and brakes,
Or chats, in cool cot, with his friend.
Full oft an image fond and dear
Rises at every glance to view,
And claims the sigh, and calls the tear.
The church-yard neighbourhood you spy;
Yon white stone marks the Youth's remains,
And close beside the Maiden's lie.
And like the mourning willow waves;
And from yon cloud the moon-beam springs,
And softly gilds the lovers graves.
Of full orb'd Cynthia, as she shines,
The glistening dew-drops seem to lay
Fresh insence at the lovers shrines.
The path-way to the House of God,
Which many a hundred rolling years
The rustics have each sabbath trod.
Within the sacred round is seen,
To grace the spot where love is laid,
Or guard the briar-bound hillocks green.
Still shall the prospect gloom the same;
But what so sweet beneath the skies,
To sighing John and sorrowing Dame?
Quoth John, “to live those children near,
“But now we seem to hear them speak,
“And angel voices strike the ear.”
“Are other prospects now to me?
“Bereaved of thee—my pride of life,
“How dear the turf that covers thee!
“As a fond look I cast around,
“Though that white stone still makes me grieve,
“How sweet to see the holy ground!
“However rich, however fine,
“I'd leave, with all its rooms of state,
“To live near that dear grave of thine!
“And ruthless seize our cottage true,
“Old John and I shall die at home,
“And meet the blow that grave in view.
“The murder'd parents of my boy,
“Our hearts would then no longer grieve,
“Our spirits meet in endless joy!”
PART III.
In words from genuine nature caught,
And thus the Gleaner joins the strain,
The same his prospects and his thought.
At length, his solitary way,
And here awhile, with lowly friends,
He hails declining summer's day.
To clasp a hundred rustic hands;
Then fondly strays o'er well-known bounds,
And mixes in the harvest bands.
O'er fragrant fields assiduous roam,
He listens to their artless strains,
Till twilight guides them gently home.
And nought but light winds whisper round,
When toil and pastime both are o'er,
And weary groups repose profound:
Pensive within this cottage true,
E'er yet the Bat has ceased to twit,
E'er yet the moon retires from view.
To breathe a prayer for suffering friend,
And supplicate the healing power
Some pitying balm from heaven to send.
Each pain and sorrow lull'd the while;
And when again the morn doth peep,
Bid him good morrow with a smile.
On yonder figure, poor and old,
'Tis Anna, of a hundred years,
Who descants still on times of old.
When she and our First George did reign;
The monarch he of lofty lays,
And she the queen of humbler strain.
And all her lovers in the grave,
The rustics, as they pass her door,
“Swear—Anna from the foe to save.”
Thankful extends her wither'd arm,
“The burial place,” quoth she, “so nigh
“'Twere hard, the foe, these bones should harm.”
On the small head their gatherings bear,
They, too, at Anna's door-way stand,
And leave a generous handful there.
Is safely stor'd, the infant throng
Again can muster, eve and morn,
Their volunteers, full twenty strong!
Th'inverted kettle forms a drum,
The slight lath arms each little thigh,
“And now let Bonaparte come!”
An urchin troop, with spirits wild,
Vow,—like their sires, they will be free!—
Thus springs the hero from the child.
The tiny soldiers, free from guile,
Forget the world contains a foe,
And sink in slumber with a smile.
The villagers and village true,
And John and Dame in love grown old,
And not be melted at the view?
Nor feel the touch of nature rise;
Nor at yon white stone drop a tear,
Near which the youth and maiden lies!
To seize upon this cottage true,
Commit each foul and felon deed,
And with its dead the church-yard strew;
On which the sweet moon now doth shine,
And make the hallow'd bones thy prey,
And mock at love and pity's shrine!
Can'st rob the chambers of the grave,
The meek babe from the bosom tear,
Nor mother, nor her infant save.
The useful ox, the generous steed,
And all the treasures of the field,
And man and beast promiscuous bleed!
Thou tak'st thy sacrilegious round,
Stabbing the labourers as they lie,
In toil's sweet slumber wrapt profound.
Bed-rid, or crutch'd, nor orphans moan,
Can 'scape thy all-devouring rage,
Nor matron's shriek, nor father's groan!
By friendships true, and loves sincere,
By spotless daughters, blameless wives,
Kinsfolk and King, and Country dear:
Arm, arm ye rich, and arm ye poor;
Defenders of your native plains,
Spurn the invader from your door:
O let your scythes to sabres turn,
Convert the sickle to the lance,
Till e'en the crook shall laurels earn.
Still gaily spread from sheaf to sheaf,
And PEACE return, as proud you quaff,
The downfall of the Gallic chief!
Your farms and cots be still your thrones,
So thrive your damsels, dames, and swains,
And quiet rest poor Anna's bones.
Arm, arm ye rich, and arm ye poor;
Defend your dear and native plains,
And spurn th'Invader from your door.
As we crossed over the way, my friend pointed to a neat but unfinished cottage, immediately opposite the church.
“I built this partly with my own hands, and my poor boy's, that are now all dust,” sighed John, sorrowfully, “on purpose for my dame and myself, had my son and Sally lived to marry and taken the farm; but, as God took them, I let it go without thinking of, or touching it, and kept doing a little to it, from time to time, but often broke away, not being able to stand and work so near the poor Lovers graves!”
GLEANINGS IN ENG. V. II. P. 619.This worthy young man and woman were betrothed to each other, but fell early victims to the same disorder—a rapid consumption.
Ann Earl, who resides in a cottage immediately opposite to that of John Hills, bordering on the church-yard. In her youth, she is said to have been extremely beautiful. The author remembers her in the same house upwards of forty years; and, in a recent conversation with her, finds she has a memory to all which then passed.
John and Dame | ||