The political and occasional poems of Winthrop Mackworth Praed Edited, with notes, by Sir George Young |
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COUNSELS OF A FATHER TO HIS SON. |
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The political and occasional poems of Winthrop Mackworth Praed | ||
271
XLVII. COUNSELS OF A FATHER TO HIS SON.
“Down, Derry Down!'—Old Song.
When I at last shall sleep in peace,
When life's consumption shall be o'er,
When I shall fill that payless place
Where none shall plot or plunder more
Remember on what wings I soared
To infamy's unfading crown,
How I became a noble lord,
And you became the Dean of Down.
When life's consumption shall be o'er,
When I shall fill that payless place
Where none shall plot or plunder more
Remember on what wings I soared
To infamy's unfading crown,
How I became a noble lord,
And you became the Dean of Down.
272
Professing disregard of self,
I won the ermine of a Peer;
Avowing carelessness of pelf,
I earned some thousand pounds a year;
I caught the favours of the Court,
And seemed as honest as a clown;
And though I fathered a “Report,”
I fathered, too, the Dean of Down.
I won the ermine of a Peer;
Avowing carelessness of pelf,
I earned some thousand pounds a year;
I caught the favours of the Court,
And seemed as honest as a clown;
And though I fathered a “Report,”
I fathered, too, the Dean of Down.
By turns with every party leagued,
As each by turns might rise or fall,
I blustered, bullied, schemed, intrigued,
Was loved by none, was used by all;
Placeman and patriot, both for pay,
I flinched not from the general frown—
I am the Chancellor to-day,
And you to-day the Dean of Down.
As each by turns might rise or fall,
I blustered, bullied, schemed, intrigued,
Was loved by none, was used by all;
Placeman and patriot, both for pay,
I flinched not from the general frown—
I am the Chancellor to-day,
And you to-day the Dean of Down.
If I on this world's busy stage
Had worshipped honour, followed truth,
Less praise would gild my hoary age,
Less hope would greet your sanguine youth.
If blameless I my gown had worn,
I still might wear my plain stuff gown;
If I had shrunk from public scorn,
You would not be the Dean of Down.
Had worshipped honour, followed truth,
Less praise would gild my hoary age,
Less hope would greet your sanguine youth.
If blameless I my gown had worn,
I still might wear my plain stuff gown;
If I had shrunk from public scorn,
You would not be the Dean of Down.
273
Go forth and do as I have done,
Like glory on your pathway shine;
Mine be your principles, my son,
And be your profits more than mine;
Haste, worthy of your sire's embrace,
To emulate your sire's renown;
Be false and factious, bold and base,
And make your son the Dean of Down!
Like glory on your pathway shine;
Mine be your principles, my son,
And be your profits more than mine;
Haste, worthy of your sire's embrace,
To emulate your sire's renown;
Be false and factious, bold and base,
And make your son the Dean of Down!
The political and occasional poems of Winthrop Mackworth Praed | ||