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The Works of John Hookham Frere In Verse and Prose

Now First Collected with a Prefatory Memoir by his Nephews W. E. and Sir Bartle Frere

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THE BUBBLE YEAR.

Might we not hope, with humble confidence,
That finally a benignant Providence
Will extricate the British nation
From her embarrassed situation,
And graciously dispense
An earthquake or a pestilence.
An earthquake would be far the best,
To set the question once for all, at rest;
Sinking the sister isle
At least a statute mile,
With a low, subsiding motion,
Beneath the level of the German Ocean,

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There to suffer a sea change,
Into something queer and strange:
Then if their “bones are coral made.”
They may supply the British trade
With an important new commodity:
Besides, when each Papistic churl
Shall have his eye-balls turn'd to pearl,
When “those are pearls which were his eyes.”
When each invaluable ball
Is fish'd to light by British enterprize
And British capital,
To what a premium will the shares arise.