BestLightNovel.com

The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D Volume I Part 51

The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D - BestLightNovel.com

You’re reading novel The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D Volume I Part 51 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy

As Jove will not attend on less, When things of more importance press: You can't, grave sir, believe it hard, That you, a low Hibernian bard, Should cool your heels a while, and wait Unanswer'd at your patron's gate; And would my lord vouchsafe to grant This one poor humble boon I want, Free leave to play his secretary, As Falstaff acted old king Harry;[1]

I'd tell of yours in rhyme and print, Folks shrug, and cry, "There's nothing in't."

And, after several readings over, It s.h.i.+nes most in the marble cover.

How could so fine a taste dispense With mean degrees of wit and sense?

Nor will my lord so far beguile The wise and learned of our isle; To make it pa.s.s upon the nation, By dint of his sole approbation.

The task is arduous, patrons find, To warp the sense of all mankind: Who think your Muse must first aspire, Ere he advance the doctor higher.

You've cause to say he meant you well: That you are thankful, who can tell?

For still you're short (which grieves your spirit) Of his intent: you mean your merit.

Ah! _quanto rectius, tu adepte, Qui nil moliris tarn inepte_?[2]

Smedley,[3] thou Jonathan of Clogher, "When thou thy humble lay dost offer To Grafton's grace, with grateful heart, Thy thanks and verse devoid of art: Content with what his bounty gave, No larger income dost thou crave."

But you must have cascades, and all Ierne's lake, for your ca.n.a.l, Your vistoes, barges, and (a pox on All pride!) our speaker for your c.o.xon:[4]

It's pity that he can't bestow you Twelve commoners in caps to row you.

Thus Edgar proud, in days of yore,[5]

Held monarchs labouring at the oar; And, as he pa.s.s'd, so swell'd the Dee, Enraged, as Ern would do at thee.

How different is this from Smedley!

(His name is up, he may in bed lie) "Who only asks some pretty cure, In wholesome soil and ether pure: The garden stored with artless flowers, In either angle shady bowers: No gay parterre with costly green Must in the ambient hedge be seen; But Nature freely takes her course, Nor fears from him ungrateful force: No shears to check her sprouting vigour, Or shape the yews to antic figure."

But you, forsooth, your all must squander On that poor spot, call'd Dell-ville, yonder; And when you've been at vast expenses In whims, parterres, ca.n.a.ls, and fences, Your a.s.sets fail, and cash is wanting; Nor farther buildings, farther planting: No wonder, when you raise and level, Think this wall low, and that wall bevel.

Here a convenient box you found, Which you demolish'd to the ground: Then built, then took up with your arbour, And set the house to Rupert Barber.

You sprang an arch which, in a scurvy Humour, you tumbled topsy-turvy.

You change a circle to a square, Then to a circle as you were: Who can imagine whence the fund is, That you _quadrata_ change _rotundis_?

To Fame a temple you erect, A Flora does the dome protect; Mounts, walks, on high; and in a hollow You place the Muses and Apollo; There s.h.i.+ning 'midst his train, to grace Your whimsical poetic place.

These stories were of old design'd As fables: but you have refined The poets mythologic dreams, To real Muses, G.o.ds, and streams.

Who would not swear, when you contrive thus, That you're Don Quixote redivivus?

Beneath, a dry ca.n.a.l there lies, Which only Winter's rain supplies.

O! couldst thou, by some magic spell, Hither convey St. Patrick's well![6]

Here may it rea.s.sume its stream, And take a greater Patrick's name!

If your expenses rise so high; What income can your wants supply?

Yet still you fancy you inherit A fund of such superior merit, That you can't fail of more provision, All by my lady's kind decision.

For, the more livings you can fish up, You think you'll sooner be a bishop: That could not be my lord's intent, Nor can it answer the event.

Most think what has been heap'd on you To other sort of folk was due: Rewards too great for your flim-flams, Epistles, riddles, epigrams.

Though now your depth must not be sounded, The time was, when you'd have compounded For less than Charley Grattan's school!

Five hundred pound a-year's no fool!

Take this advice then from your friend, To your ambition put an end, Be frugal, Pat: pay what you owe, Before you build and you bestow.

Be modest, nor address your betters With begging, vain, familiar letters.

A pa.s.sage may be found,[7] I've heard, In some old Greek or Latian bard, Which says, "Would crows in silence eat Their offals, or their better meat, Their generous feeders not provoking By loud and inharmonious croaking, They might, unhurt by Envy's claws, Live on, and stuff to boot their maws."

[Footnote 1: "King Henry the Fourth," Part I, Act ii, Scene 4.--_W. E. B._]

[Footnote 2: Adapted from Hor., "Epist. ad Pisones," 140.--_W. E. B._]

[Footnote 3: See the "Pet.i.tion to the Duke of Grafton," _post_, p. 345.--_W. E. B._]

[Footnote 4: Alluding to Dr. Delany's ambitious choice of fixing in the island of the Lake of Erin, where Sir Ralph Gore had a villa.--_Scott_.]

[Footnote 5: When residing at Chester, he obliged eight of his tributary princes to row him in a barge upon the Dee. Hume's "History of England,"

vol. i, p. 106.--_W. E. B_.]

[Footnote 6: Which had suddenly dried up. See _post_, vol. ii, "Verses on the sudden drying up of St. Patrick's Well, near Trinity College, Dublin."--_W.E.B._]

[Footnote 7: Hor., "Epist.," lib. I, xvii, 50.

"Sed tacitus pasci si corvus posset, haberet Plus dapis, et rixae multo minus invidiaeque."

I append the original, for the sake of Swift's very free rendering.--_W. E. B._]

A LIBEL ON THE REVEREND DR. DELANY, AND HIS EXCELLENCY JOHN, LORD CARTERET 1729

Deluded mortals, whom the great Choose for companions _tete-a-tete_; Who at their dinners, _en famille_, Get leave to sit whene'er you will; Then boasting tell us where you dined, And how his lords.h.i.+p was so kind; How many pleasant things he spoke; And how you laugh'd at every joke: Swear he's a most facetious man; That you and he are cup and can; You travel with a heavy load, And quite mistake preferment's road.

Suppose my lord and you alone; Hint the least interest of your own, His visage drops, he knits his brow, He cannot talk of business now: Or, mention but a vacant post, He'll turn it off with "Name your toast:"

Nor could the nicest artist paint A countenance with more constraint.

For, as their appet.i.tes to quench, Lords keep a pimp to bring a wench; So men of wit are but a kind Of panders to a vicious mind Who proper objects must provide To gratify their l.u.s.t of pride, When, wearied with intrigues of state, They find an idle hour to prate.

Then, shall you dare to ask a place, You forfeit all your patron's grace, And disappoint the sole design, For which he summon'd you to dine.

Thus Congreve spent in writing plays, And one poor office, half his days: While Montague,[1] who claim'd the station To be Maecenas of the nation, For poets open table kept, But ne'er consider'd where they slept: Himself as rich as fifty Jews, Was easy, though they wanted shoes; And crazy Congreve scarce could spare A s.h.i.+lling to discharge his chair: Till prudence taught him to appeal From Paean's fire to party zeal; Not owing to his happy vein The fortunes of his later scene, Took proper principles to thrive: And so might every dunce alive.[2]

Thus Steele, who own'd what others writ, And flourish'd by imputed wit, From perils of a hundred jails, Withdrew to starve, and die in Wales.

Thus Gay, the hare with many friends, Twice seven long years the court attends: Who, under tales conveying truth, To virtue form'd a princely youth:[3]

Who paid his courts.h.i.+p with the crowd, As far as modest pride allow'd; Rejects a servile usher's place, And leaves St. James's in disgrace.[4]

Thus Addison, by lords carest, Was left in foreign lands distrest; Forgot at home, became for hire A travelling tutor to a squire: But wisely left the Muses' hill, To business shaped the poet's quill, Let all his barren laurels fade, Took up himself the courtier's trade, And, grown a minister of state, Saw poets at his levee wait.[5]

Hail, happy Pope! whose generous mind Detesting all the statesman kind, Contemning courts, at courts unseen, Refused the visits of a queen.

A soul with every virtue fraught, By sages, priests, or poets taught; Whose filial piety excels Whatever Grecian story tells;[6]

A genius for all stations fit, Whose meanest talent is his wit: His heart too great, though fortune little, To lick a rascal statesman's spittle: Appealing to the nation's taste, Above the reach of want is placed: By Homer dead was taught to thrive, Which Homer never could alive; And sits aloft on Pindus' head, Despising slaves that cringe for bread.

True politicians only pay For solid work, but not for play: Nor ever choose to work with tools Forged up in colleges and schools, Consider how much more is due To all their journeymen than you: At table you can Horace quote; They at a pinch can bribe a vote: You show your skill in Grecian story; But they can manage Whig and Tory; You, as a critic, are so curious To find a verse in Virgil spurious; But they can smoke the deep designs, When Bolingbroke with Pulteney dines.

Besides, your patron may upbraid ye, That you have got a place already; An office for your talents fit, To flatter, carve, and show your wit; To snuff the lights and stir the fire, And get a dinner for your hire.

What claim have you to place or pension?

He overpays in condescension.

But, reverend doctor, you we know Could never condescend so low; The viceroy, whom you now attend, Would, if he durst, be more your friend; Nor will in you those gifts despise, By which himself was taught to rise: When he has virtue to retire, He'll grieve he did not raise you higher, And place you in a better station, Although it might have pleased the nation.

This may be true--submitting still To Walpole's more than royal will; And what condition can be worse?

He comes to drain a beggar's purse; He comes to tie our chains on faster, And show us England is our master: Caressing knaves, and dunces wooing, To make them work their own undoing.

What has he else to bait his traps, Or bring his vermin in, but sc.r.a.ps?

The offals of a church distrest; A hungry vicarage at best; Or some remote inferior post, With forty pounds a-year at most?

But here again you interpose-- Your favourite lord is none of those Who owe their virtues to their stations, And characters to dedications: For, keep him in, or turn him out, His learning none will call in doubt; His learning, though a poet said it Before a play, would lose no credit; Nor Pope would dare deny him wit, Although to praise it Philips writ.

I own he hates an action base, His virtues battling with his place: Nor wants a nice discerning spirit Betwixt a true and spurious merit; Can sometimes drop a voter's claim, And give up party to his fame.

I do the most that friends.h.i.+p can; I hate the viceroy, love the man.

But you, who, till your fortune's made, Must be a sweetener by your trade, Should swear he never meant us ill; We suffer sore against his will; That, if we could but see his heart, He would have chose a milder part: We rather should lament his case, Who must obey, or lose his place.

Since this reflection slipt your pen, Insert it when you write again; And, to ill.u.s.trate it, produce This simile for his excuse: "So, to destroy a guilty land An [7]angel sent by Heaven's command, While he obeys Almighty will, Perhaps may feel compa.s.sion still; And wish the task had been a.s.sign'd To spirits of less gentle kind."

But I, in politics grown old, Whose thoughts are of a different mould, Who from my soul sincerely hate Both kings and ministers of state; Who look on courts with stricter eyes To see the seeds of vice arise; Can lend you an allusion fitter, Though flattering knaves may call it bitter; Which, if you durst but give it place, Would show you many a statesman's face: Fresh from the tripod of Apollo, I had it in the words that follow: Take notice to avoid offence, I here except his excellence: "So, to effect his monarch's ends, From h.e.l.l a viceroy devil ascends; His budget with corruptions cramm'd, The contributions of the d.a.m.n'd; Which with unsparing hand he strews Through courts and senates as he goes; And then at Beelzebub's black hall, Complains his budget was too small."

Your simile may better s.h.i.+ne In verse, but there is truth in mine.

For no imaginable things Can differ more than G.o.ds and kings: And statesmen, by ten thousand odds, Are angels just as kings are G.o.ds.

[Footnote 1: Earl of Halifax; see Johnson's "Life of Montague."--_W. E. B._]

[Footnote 2: The whole of this paragraph is unjust both to Halifax and Congreve; for immediately after the production of Congreve's first play, "The Old Bachelor," Halifax gave him a place in the Pipe Office, and another in the Customs, of 600 a year. Ultimately he had at least four sinecure appointments which together afforded him some 1,200 a year. See Johnson's "Lives of the Poets," edit. Cunningham.--_W. E. B._]

[Footnote 3: William, Duke of c.u.mberland, son to George II, "The Butcher."]

Please click Like and leave more comments to support and keep us alive.

RECENTLY UPDATED MANGA

The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D Volume I Part 51 summary

You're reading The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Jonathan Swift. Already has 467 views.

It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.

BestLightNovel.com is a most smartest website for reading manga online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to BestLightNovel.com