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] | ||
A PAIR OF LYRIC EPISTLES TO LORD MACARTNEY AND HIS SHIP.
Delicious subjects for an epic song!
Epistle to Lord Macartney.
Wide as a Cheshire cat our court will grin,
To find as many pearls and gems on board
As will not leave thee room to stick a pin.
Epistle to the Ship.
It has been my wish, that the following pair of Lyric Epistles might be presented, with my Odes, to the Emperor Kien Long, on account of the quantity of original merit—but, to use a sublime phrase, as it would be ‘letting the cat out of the bag,’ I have forborne.
The bustle and prowess of the invincible Duke on Bagshot Heath—the Heath on fire—the royal visit— the man of straw blown from the mine—the explosion of the powder mills at Hownslow—the attention of gods, as well as of the crows, to the camp —the humility of the Bagshot bushes, &c. are circumstances which, however they may be disdained by the fastidious pen of history, ought to be recorded. Indeed, I from my soul believe, that our historians, as they are called, are too conceitedly lofty to think of sullying a page with an account of the camp transaction; but poets were the only historians of ancient times, which I am ready to
The Epistle to the Ship seems so be full of poetry and good wishes; but the horrid picture of the future disappointment of our Ambassador and his Suite at Pekin, with the disgracefully attendant circumstances, we hope to be merely a playful sketch of fancy of the Muse, and that she has really been visited by no such flogging illuminations.
A LYRIC EPISTLE TO LORD MACARTNEY,
AMBASSADOR TO THE COURT OF CHINA.
Deck'd in his liv'ry too, a glorious thing,
Amid the wonders at Saint James's done;
At house of Buckingham, in Richmond bow'rs,
At Kew, and lastly Windsor's lofty tow'rs,
Rich scenes at once of majesty and fun;
Where met the grimly regiments of death;
Where not the dev'l their rage sublime could damp;
Though heav'n, as if it meant to mock the matter,
Pour'd on their powder'd heads huge tubs of water,
And made the mighty Heath a dirty swamp.
Delicious subjects for the epic song.
On which the Kings of Britain oft depended,
When bold Rebellion through the nation ran;
Her venom spread, and told a vulgar host,
To humble, sweet Subordination lost,
That lo! the mightiest monarch was but man!
Swell'd by the gas of courage to balloons;
Where, though those men like bacon all were smok'd,
Not one, by God's good providence, was chok'd.
‘Now wet, a riding dish-clout,’ shalt thou say—
‘Now broiling, whizzing, dropping like a steak,
So val'rous, 'mid the sun's meridian ray!’
What wisdom, sweetness, love, pervades the whole!
By brambles, thistles, barb'rous docks disgrac'd;
That need the ploughshare, harrow, and the fire—
Some souls are caves of filth and spectred gloom,
That want a window and a broom,
To yield them light, and clear the mire.
When honours lift th' unworthy fool on high,
On Fortune how with fierce contempt I scowl!
She hangs a dirty cloud upon the sky,
And with an eagle's pinion imps an owl.
And ribbons, 'stead of ropes, their backs adorn—
Thus crawls the toad amid the fairest flow'rs,
And with the lily drinks the dews of morn.
The pole-star of our military nation.
How pleasant then to see a Richmond rise!
Friend of a king, and fav'rite of the skies!
Impos'd a tax on coals, that starv'd the poor:
But mark, how often good proceeds from evil!
This deed of Charles is now a white-wash'd devil—
Lo, Richmond casts a lustre round the sin!
He sniggles modest Merit from her hole;
See Admiration to his virtues bend;
And lo, the star-clad veteran adores!
While Glory humbly kneeling to the skies,
With supplicating hands and fervent eyes,
A length of days upon his head implores.
Is ever angling to catch martial fame:
And say too, how most fortunate the duke,
What noble fishes hang upon his hook;
Whilst humbler mortals, lab'ring day and night,
Poor patient creatures, seldom feel a bite.
That fost'ring feeds the flow'r of happiest hue—
In Vice's grasp, it withers, wounds, and kills:
'Tis then the fang so fatal, form'd to make,
A passage for the venom of the snake,
That Nature's life with dissolution fills.
That Richmond holds the military rod:
No Janus he, with selfish views to fob,
And touch the nation's pocket with a job.
Talk of the bold transactions of the peer;
And say, what probably he can't believe,
That lo, the dauntless body of his grace,
In duels bor'd, has scarcely one sound place—
A honeycomb, a cullender, a sieve!
Proud of his post, and fearless of his neck,
Though only one upon his shoulders dear—
Thus Valour smiles at danger, death, and pain,
And feels an eighteen-pounder through his brain,
Coolly as some a pat upon the ear!
Frighten'd each village, turn'd each hovel pale;
Struck all the birds with terror, save the crows,
Who, spying such commotion in the land,
Concluded some great matter was in hand,
Much blood and carnage 'midst contending foes.
Say, that the Bagshot bushes bow'd with awe;
And say, his phiz such valour did inspire,
That lo, the very ground he trod, caught fire.
Their mouths well cramm'd with dust and admiration,
So ardent ev'ry eye's devouring look
To seize the galloping, the flying duke.
Nothing to pay!
All the duke's friends, great quality and small;
Our great King George, and lovely queen,
Were entertain'd scot-free, I ween—
Our generous nation doom'd to pay it all.
I think that Parliament, with much ill will,
May growl, and swear it was an idle thing,
This game of soldiers, such a childish play—
But let me answer Parliament, and say,
It was not childish, for it pleas'd the king—
Arm'd with such lion-paws, and teeth so long;
That Punch ne'er triumph'd in a fiercer fight.
Say, how he fir'd the Hounslow mills of powder;
Say, how the sympathizing grain, with sound,
Frighten'd the tiles from all the roofs around,
Defying the bold thunder to roar louder!
Now fiercely gallop'd over by his grace.
That, to the lord of battles , with a sigh,
Thus spoke the monarch of the clouds—‘Son Mars,
Had Troy possess'd a hero like the duke,
With such a soul, and such a fighting look,
Our city had been safe amidst her wars.
And beg a lesson from the hero's book.’
Was so inspir'd, so val'rous, and so hot;
How had this duke the sons of battle sham'd,
'Mid scenes of thunder, where they charg'd with shot!
Although so lofty on their cloud-capp'd tow'rs,
Such were the volumes of ascending smoke,
Smutty as blacksmiths look'd the heav'nly pow'rs;
Flew up, and put their godships in a fright!
That, at the distance of a mile,
His grace, a skull that powder wants, can note;
(Which, when it happens, let that skull beware)
See too a club with one disorder'd hair,
And mark one spot of grease upon a coat.
Till Richmond usher'd in the morn of taste!
We hope to see a book on reputation,
Proving that public vice should bring no shame ;
That private only damns a noble name.
Who blushing sins in secret with a friend,
Shall be a viler hussey than the woman
Who hangs her lips like cherries out for sale,
And shows her bosom's lilies, to regale
Each grazing beast that offers—quite a common.
Thou cryest, O Macartney.—Good may spring:
It may unto thy embassy give weight,
By putting great Kien Long into a fright.
‘But all the rank and file are like his grace—
Then shall I shake upon my sapphire throne:
For troops like Richmond, that on valour feast,
May, like wild meteors, pour into mine east,
And leave my palace neither stick nor stone;
In Britain breakfast, and in China sup.’
King of England, whose mistress was a French woman, the great, great, and illustrious ancestor of his present grace.
Witness the convenient house and gardens near Plymouth Dock, so œconomically built with the public money. The annals of honour furnish us not with a sublimer instance of self-denial.
It is reported, that a colossal figure, stuffed with straw, was blown out of the hill, to give their majesties an adequate idea of the ascent of ten thousand men or so, a frequent event at grand sieges. It is moreover reported, that this stuffed figure obtained a large portion of royal approbation. Indeed I am strongly inclined to believe the story.—It was quite a new idea.
TO THE SHIP.
Success attend our court's delightful whim;
And all thy gaudy gentlemen on board;
With coaches just like gingerbread, so fine,
Amid the Asiatic world to shine,
And greet of China the imperial lord.
I hear each wide-mouth'd salutation-gun;
I see thy streamers wanton in the gale;
I see the sallow natives crowd the shore,
I see them tremble at thy royal roar;
I see the very Mandarines turn pale.
So lofty, to our trav'ling Britons bow;
Bow, mountains sky-enwrapp'd of Chin-chung-chan;
Floods of Ming-ho, your thund'ring voices raise;
Cuckoos of Ming-fou-you, exalt their praise,
With geese of Sou-chen-che, and Tang-ting-tan.
Hang by your tails, and all the branches load;
Then grin applause upon the gaudy throng,
And drop them honours as they pass along.
Winnow, ye butterflies, around the scene;
Goats, sheep, and oxen, through your pastures prance;
Ye buffaloes and dromedaries, dance;
And elephants, pray join th' unwieldy jig.
The glitt'ring coaches with their happy load,
All proudly rolling to Pe-kin's fair town;
And lo, arriv'd, I see the emp'ror stare,
Deep marv'ling at a sight so very rare;
And now, ye gods! I see the emp'ror frown.
‘Good folks, what is it that you want, I pray?’
And now I hear aloud Macartney cry,
‘Emp'ror, my court, inform'd that you were rich,
Sublimely feeling a strong money-itch,
Across the eastern ocean bade me fly;
And gimcracks rare for China-man and Tartar.
Some pretty diamonds to our gracious queen,
Big as one's fist or so, or somewhat bigger,
Would cut upon her petticoat a figure—
A petticoat of whom each poet sings,
That beams on birth-days for the best of kings.
These give not half the toil we find in trade.’—
On which th' astonish'd emp'ror cries, ‘Odsfish!
Presents;—present the rogues the bastinade.’
At danger cow'ring, wears a wither'd look;
Palsy'd his sinewy arm, where vengeance sate,
Whose grasp the rugged oak of ages shook—
His blood, so hot, grown suddenly so chill;
Sunk from a torrent to the creeping rill.
Behold him seiz'd, his seat of honour bare;
The bamboo sounds—alas! no voice of Fame:
Stripp'd, schoolboy-like, and now I see his train,
I see their lily bottoms writhe with pain,
And, like his lordship's, blush with blood and shame.
And collar blue, around their pretty necks?
Ah! what the epaulettes that roast the eye,
And loyal buttons blazing with George Rex?
Heav'ns! if Kien Long resolves upon their stripping,
These are no talismans to ward a whipping.
I see the mighty emp'ror gravely place
Fools'-caps on all the poor degraded men—
And now I hear the solemn emp'ror say,
‘'Tis thus we kings of China folly pay;
Now, children, ye may all go home agen.’
How in Old England wilt thou show thy face?
I fear thy visage will be wondrous long.
Know, it may happen—ministers and kings,
Like common folk, are fallible—poor things!
Too often sanguine, and as often wrong.
Lo, like a Cheshire cat our court will grin!
How glad to find as many gems on board,
As will not leave thee room to stick a pin!
The Works of Peter Pindar [i.e. John Wolcot] | ||