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MY SON AND HEIR
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350

MY SON AND HEIR

I

My mother bids me bind my heir,
But not the trade where I should bind;
To place a boy—the how and where—
It is the plague of parent-kind!

II

She does not hint the slightest plan,
Nor what indentures to indorse;
Whether to bind him to a man,—
Or, like Mazeppa, to a horse.

III

What line to choose of likely rise,
To something in the Stocks at last,—
‘Fast bind, fast find,’ the proverb cries,
I find I cannot bind so fast!

IV

A Statesman James can never be;
A Tailor?—there I only learn
His chief concern is cloth, and he
Is always cutting his concern.

V

A Seedsman?—I'd not have him so;
A Grocer's plum might disappoint;
A Butcher?—no, not that—although
I hear ‘the times are out of joint!’

VI

Too many of all trades there be,
Like Pedlars, each has such a pack;
A merchant selling coals?—we see
The buyer send to cellar back.

VII

A Hardware dealer?—that might please,
But if his trade's foundation leans
On spikes and nails, he won't have ease
When he retires upon his means.

VIII

A Soldier?—there he has not nerves,
A Sailor seldom lays up pelf:
A Baker?—no, a baker serves,
His customer before himself.

IX

Dresser of hair?—that's not the sort;
A Joiner jars with his desire—
A Churchman?—James is very short,
And cannot to a church aspire.

X

A Lawyer?—that's a hardish term!
A Publisher might give him ease,
If he could into Longman's firm,
Just plunge at once ‘in medias Rees.’

XI

A shop for pot, and pan, and cup,
Such brittle Stock I can't advise;
A Builder running houses up,
Their gains are stories—may be lies!

XII

A Coppersmith I can't endure—
Nor petty Usher A, B, C-ing;
A Publican, no father sure
Would be the author of his being!

XIII

A Paper-maker?—come he must
To rags before he sells a sheet—
A Miller?—all his toil is just
To make a meal—he does not eat.

XIV

A Currier?—that by favour goes—
A Chandler gives me great misgiving—
An Undertaker?—one of those
That do not hope to get their living!

XV

Three Golden Balls?—I like them not;
An Auctioneer I never did—
The victim of a slavish lot,
Obliged to do as he is bid!

351

XVI

A Broker watching fall and rise
Of Stock?—I'd rather deal in stone,—
A Printer?—there his toils comprise
Another's work beside his own.

XVII

A Cooper?—neither I nor Jim
Have any taste or turn for that—
A Fish retailer?—but with him,
One part of trade is always flat.

XVIII

A Painter?—long he would not live,—
An Artist's a precarious craft—
In trade Apothecaries give,
But very seldom take, a draught.

XIX

A Glazier?—what if he should smash!
A Crispin he shall not be made—
A Grazier may be losing cash,
Although he drives ‘a roaring trade.’

XX

Well, something must be done! to look
On all my little works around—
James is too big a boy, like book
To leave upon the shelf unbound.

XXI

But what to do?—my temples ache
From evening's dew till morning's pearl,
What course to take my boy to make—
O could I make my boy—a girl!