The Poetical Works of the late Christopher Anstey With Some Account of the Life and Writings of the Author, By his son, John Anstey |
The Poetical Works of the late Christopher Anstey | ||
268
LIBERALITY, OR THE DECAYED MACARONI
Quære peregrinum Vicinia rauca reclamat. horat. ep.
269
I
I am a decay'd macaroni,My lodging's up three pair of stairs;
My cheeks are grown wondrously bony,
And grey, very grey, are my hairs:
270
II
My landlady eyes me severely,And frowns when she opens the door:
My tailor behaves cavalierly—
And my coat will bear scouring no more:
III
Alas! what misfortunes attendThe man of a liberal mind!
How poor are his thanks at the end,
From base and ungrateful mankind!
IV
My father, a stingy old rum,His fortune by industry made,
And dying bequeath'd me a plum,
Which he meant I should double in trade:
V
Oh! how could he destine to tradeA man, of my figure and sense!
A man who so early display'd
Such a liberal taste for expence!
271
VI
When I first came to years of discretion,I took a round sum from the stocks,
Just to keep up a decent succession
Of race-horses, women, and cocks:
VII
Good company always my aim,Comme il faut were my cellars and table:
And freely I ask'd to the same
Ev'ry jockey that came to my stable;
VIII
No stripling of fortune I notedWith a passion for carding and dice,
But to him I my friendship devoted,
And gave him the best of advice:
IX
“To look upon money as trash,Not play like a pitiful elf,
But turn all his acres to cash,
And sport it as free as myself.”
272
X
And as faro was always my joy,I set up a bank of my own,
Just to enter a hobbydehoy
And give him a smack of the ton:
XI
In the morning I took him a hunting,At dinner well-plied with champain,
At tea gave a lecture on punting;
At midnight, on throwing a main:
XII
His friends too with bumpers I cheer'd,And in truth should have deem'd it a sin
To have made, when a stranger appear'd,
Any scruple of taking him in.
XIII
As I always was kind, and soft-hearted,I took a rich maiden to wife;
And though in a week we were parted,
I gave her a pension for life;
273
XIV
My free and humane disposition(Thank heaven) I ever have shewn
To all in a helpless condition,
Whose fortunes I'd first made my own:
XV
To --- with whom long ago,My friendship in childhood begun,
I presented a handsome rouleau,
When his all I had luckily won:
XVI
My friends were much pleas'd with the action,But charm'd when I open'd my door
To his wife, whom he lov'd to distraction,
But could not support any more.
XVII
The love of my country at last,In a soul so exalted as mine,
All other fond passions surpast,
I long'd in the senate to shine:
274
XVIII
With a liberal zeal I was fir'dThe good of the state to promote,
And nothing more truly desir'd
Than to make the best use of my vote:
XIX
I panted th' abuses to quashThat cast such a slur on the nation,
And resolv'd to dispose of my cash,
In buying a whole corporation:
XX
I soon heard of one to be sold,Such a bargain, I could not forego it,
With the freemen so cheap were enroll'd
A lawyer, a priest, and a poet.
XXI
I touch'd all the aldermen round,And paid double price for the mayor;
But at length to my sorrow I found
They'd been sold long before I came there;
275
XXII
In vain for sarcastical songDid my poet his talents display,
My lawyer th' election prolong,
And the parson get drunk ev'ry day:
XXIII
To my very last farthing I treated,And set the whole town in a flame:
And since I've so basely been cheated,
I'll publish the truth to their shame:
XXIV
My rival aloft in his chairLike a hero triumphantly rode,
My lawyer and priest at his ear,
My poet presenting an ode:
XXV
While unable to pay for their prog,Their wine, their tobacco, and ale,
I was forc'd to sneak off like a dog
With a cannister tied to his tail:
276
XXVI
Yet how can I patiently yieldThose palms I so justly might claim,
When I view such a plentiful field
For fair oratorical fame?
XXVII
'Tis true, I'm a little decay'd,My lungs rather husky of late,
Yet still could I throw in my aid,
To manage a party debate:
XXVIII
My legs (you observe it no doubt)Partake of the general shock;
Yet I trust they might fairly hold out
Seven hours by Westminster clock,
XXIX
But in vain have I studied the artWith abuse to bespatter the foe,
And shoot it like mud from a cart,
With the true Ciceronian flow:
277
XXX
My genius and spirit I feelDepress'd by adversity's cup;
My merit, alas! and my zeal
For my country, hath eaten me up:
XXXI
Yet spite of so fair a pretension,Th' unfeeling, ill-judging Premier
Hath meanly denied me a pension—
Though I ask'd but a thousand a year.
XXXII
Where then shall I fly from oppression,Or where shall I seek an abode,
Unskill'd in a trade or profession—
Too feeble for taking the road!
XXXIII
I'll hasten, O! Bath, to thy springs,Thy seats of the wealthy and gay,
Where the hungry are fed with good things,
And the rich are sent empty away:
278
XXXIV
With you, ye sweet streams of compassion,My fortune I'll strive to repair,
Where so many people of fashion
Have money enough, and to spare:
XXXV
And trust, as they give it so freely,By private subscription to raise,
Enough to maintain me genteely,
And sport with, the rest of my days.
The Poetical Works of the late Christopher Anstey | ||