JEAN
BAPTISTE:—A Poetic Olio.
MOST
RESPECTIVELY INSCRIBED TO STEPHEN SEWELL, ESQR.
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Canto I.
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Docti indoctique scribere volunt,
Id est, “both
learned and unlearn’d we write,”*
As an old heathen said with wise intent;
But since the Muses have been
put to flight†
By
scribbling scarecrows—or in dungeon pent,
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Fated
to grope thro’ ignorance’s waning
night,
‘Tis deem’d in vain to stride about
Parnassus
And spur the crazy Jade, yclept Pegasus. |
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II.
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Yet
some would write to keep the world in wonder;
No matter what the subject of
their theme,
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Whether
it be the splitting words asunder,
Digesting sentences,—or
fancy’s dream,
Of bright eyes—set with lashes o’er
and under,
Of brown or black; which scarce indeed
doth seem,
Worth
writing verse about, (tho’ poets do so—
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And
seem as fond of trifles, as an old virtu’so.)
[Page 5] |
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III.
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Or yet of auburn hair, in copious tresses,
Which adds such beauty to the dimpled
cheek;
Or crimson blush—that something odd expresses,
Which
truant lips would fain—but dare not speak,—
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Or
Ladies’ ‘kerchiefs, zones, or sattin
dresses,—
Item cum multis—which
would take a week
To specify—in this stiff, wayward rhyme;
And at the best—’twould be but mock
sublime. |
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IV.
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Some woo and supplicate the “tuneful nine,”
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As if they were young misses in their teens;—
Some bow submissive at their “sacred shrine,”
And call them “Goddesses”
and “heav’nly queens;”
Some choose out one, and her great name
combine,
With that of “mistress,”
whom he “humbly weens,” |
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Will
deign to aid him in his bold endeavour,
To prove himself—a genius “mighty
clever.” |
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V.
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Another blubbers out—“aid me kind
muses,
To keep upright, astride the old
jaded hack,
Of Mount Parnassus”—or perchance chooses,
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Some “gnome” or “sprite”
to guide him in the track,
To fame’s proud pinnacle—and thus
abuses
Their highnesses—coupling them
in a pack—
Or by nick-names—at which the wise will
scowl,
Pull a long face—and look much like an owl.
[Page 6] |
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VI.
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I’d not recriminate—tho’t seems
a folly—
To sound such dreadful note of preparation;
As if the muses were abstracted—wholly
From their employ—engaged in
speculation—
Or craft of quidnunc—or sate melancholly,
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Brooding, in dread, o’er future desolation;—
Or slept—and could not their assistance
lend
On such obsequious votaries to attend. |
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VII.
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But gentle reader, let us jog along,—
We’ve a good way, to journey
yet together:—
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And
if the muses aid me in my song—
‘Tis well—if not—come
rain, or windy weather—
I’ll brave it all and still my course prolong;—
Should critics start and ask the
“why and whether”—
I’ll stop my ears, nor heed the pedant fools, |
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Whilst
they quote “precedent” and give their
“learned rules.” |
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VIII.
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Ego scribo—of matters strange and things,
(It may be) difficult of comprehension,
Of great affairs, and mighty blusterings;
And little wits—tho’ great
in self-pretension, |
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Perhaps
of courtiers, statesmen, or of kings.
Barring to majesty all mal-intention—
Saving perchance, it might indeed seem handy,
To have some words with’s Majesty a Dandy.
[Page 7] |
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IX.
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Which, by the bye, could scarce be deem’d
high treason, |
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By act of Parliament—the common law,
Or learn’d precedent—nor sluggish
reason,
From whence men sometimes wise conclusions
draw,
And waste the lungs and overstrain the weazon,
To shew vast eloquence—or a
small flaw! |
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But
Miss or Mister, do not think me
sinning,
For, on my word, this is but the beginning;—
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X.
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I mean beginning of digression, as you see,
I’ve written stanzas, nearly
half a score—
Just
for the sake of a variety:—
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And tho’ perhaps you’ve seen it long
before,
There’s a quotation—’tis no secrecy,
And for variety I’ll quote it
o’er:—
“Gutta cavet lapidum, non vi sed saepe cadendo,
“Sic homo fit doctus, non vi sed saepe scribendo.”
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XI.
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But I—(I should have said) intend to write,
(Not a vile critique upon this, or
that,
Or desertation upon black, or white,
Or mournful elegy on an old cat,
Nor yet the fun’ral ditty of a broken kite
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Which all well know would be confounded flat)
But what the burthen of my tale’s to be,
Have patience reader and you’ll doubtless
see. [Page 8] |
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XII.
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Yes patience—hear what I may have to say,
It may do good, if not ‘twill
do no harm;
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Just
for amusement to pass time away—
If, tinctured with a soporific charm,
It make you doze,—peruse it in the day—
When you are sick, and should it grief
disarm,
Tho’ I am neither Doctor nor Magician—
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I
might set up for a most learn’d Physician: |
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XIII.
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Perhaps give lectures—(doubtful by the way,)
On whys and wherefores of the this,
and that,
In Physics, Phthisic, Physiology—or pray?
How would you like a lecture upon skulls, square
flat,
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Or
round heads—little difference they say—
Except in thickness---but—but
“verbum sat”—
Since this is but “mere moonshine,”*
for oh, me!
I have, as yet, nor license, nor diploma. |
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XIV.
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All this patience, which the proverb says, |
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Will soothe a pain, that fretting cannot cure—
As resignation, when the good man prays,
Marks faith unwav’ring, and a
mind that’s pure—
So, I cry patience; patience e’er displays
A manly soul, that can great ills endure;
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Patience
will dig thro’ mountains and destroy
All opposition—patience o’ercame Troy!
[Page 9] |
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XV.
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Much have sage authors said,—(and say they
ought)
About great heroes—such as
Paris, Nero,
Plato et cetera—and if I thought
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It needful, I would introduce my
hero,
Along with ancient sages, kings “far brought,”
Of high degree—declining down
to zero,
Or modern votaries of the famed Apollo,
Whose heroes beggar all description hollow. |
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XVI.
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In “stricto sensu” as ‘tis
necessary,
That I should have one—and
to write without,
My plots and plans, would doubtless all miscarry,
It must be that I give his name,
no doubt.—
But gentle reader, if you cannot tarry,
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Till ‘tis my pleasure to bring things about,
In the right way—why lay aside my verses,
Or pass a stanza—but pray spare your curses. |
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XVII.
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Some men are heroes of their own creation,
(A kind of satire on a good man’s
name,)
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Who
feast their pride on fond imagination,
Or vain imaginings—‘tis
much the same;
Others, to licentia poetica, owe derivation,
Of their high dignity and “matchless
fame:”
But my Canadian hero—JEAN BAPTISTE,
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Is
“magistratus in poetica” at
least. [Page 10] |
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XVIII.
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I must needs pass a few of the first years
Of Baptiste’s life—thirty,
perhaps—or so,
The years, in which the fond idea rears
The fabric of its hopes—its
all below,
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Where
these evanish—penitence and tears,
In vain we seek—in vain indulge
our woe,
Youth pass’d away—‘tis gone
like life forever,
We seek her paths again—but we retrace them
never! |
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XIX.
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His youth had pass’d—the flow’r
of manhood too, |
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And he was bordering on that time of life,
When youthful Fancy’s animated glow,
Seems lessening in fervour—and
the strife
Of varying passions, in the bosom, show
The vigour of our days gone past—and
rife |
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With
feverish anxieties, we strive to gain
Honors and wealth—with their illusive train.
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XX.
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I would not here pretend to undertake,
To write a satire on these Errant
Knights,
Yclept Old Bachelors, who thro’
mistake,
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In their ideas of the pure delights,
Of being one’s own self, asleep, awake,
And at all times—renounce their
legal rights
To social joys—the raptures and the honey,
Of the most blissful of all blisses—Matrimony!
[Page 11] |
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XXI.
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“Their revelries” ‘tis said
“are free and funny,
“And that their days pass cheerily
along—
“Mild, calm, serene, unclouded, warm and
sunny—
“As flow the numbers of some
love-lorn song.”
But I should deem their way was rough and stonny;
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It may be truly that I’m in the wrong:—
Tho’ think of home—of kind
and tender greeting,
Of sweet caresses, smiles—and bright eyes
meeting. |
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XXII.
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And say who’d be a Bachelor—I’d
not,
That is, if I could marry to my liking,
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(Which
heav’n permit may some day be my lot),
And get a model of each beauty striking,
In love’s vocabulary—if I thought—
But where’s the rhyme? what say
you now to spiking,
—Pray pardon me—I meant to add, or ought,—
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That
if she’d half the qualities I sought, |
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XXIII.
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I could consent to hie me to the altar
Of Hymen—and there for “worse
for better,”
Submit to put on gentle cupid’s halter,
And lead a life—restricted
to the letter,
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Of
matrimonial statutes—nor falter,
As did Euripides—whose
double fetter,
Most sorely galled him—and, at length, did
vex,
His very soul, with all the softer sex. [Page
12] |
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XXIV.
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But Baptiste was a high life blade—that is, |
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Was fond of “tissue, tinsel, gauze and shew,”
And had indeed a most expressive phiz—
If you’d e’er seen it,
you’d have thought it so—
Round as a whiskey bottle—tho’ a quiz
Was once heard say—(the fact
I do not know,) |
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That
Baptiste’s head was large enough—but—well?
A quiz oft says what poets should not tell. |
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XXV.
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N’importe ‘tis beyond doubt he
had a head,
Fill’d with the feats of love
and chivalry—
And a bold, daring heart—as it was said,
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He’d been a voltigeur—for
liberty,
Had faced the foe—seen hosts of wounded,
dead,
And dying in life’s bitter
agony—
Cleft to the earth, by fate’s relentless
blow,
Busied in the last work of man below. |
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XXVI.
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He’d seen all this—nay, he had seen
much more,
He’d seen two armies meet in
awful fight;
Heard beating drums and the loud cannon’s
roar;
Seen the day darken, as if turn’d
to night,
When most terrific clouds of smoke hung o’er;
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He’d seen the foe dispersed and put to flight,
Seen what would frighten almost any hero,
His courage still abating not a zero. [Page
13] |
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XXVII.
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And so it chanc’d Jean Baptiste fell “in
love”—
Poor soul, he knew not love’s anxieties;
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He
knew not what it was his arts to prove,
And curb the fancy, that ne’er
quiet is—
Knew not how difficult it was to move
Fond woman’s heart—made
up of contrarieties;
In fact (what the kind reader may discern)
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Baptiste,
as yet, had many things to learn! |
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XXVIII.
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In love, or into love, which e’er
you please—
‘Tis quite the same, according
as things go,
For love—‘tis said, is a most dire
disease,
And makes one feel, “in
spots, all over so!”
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Though
I’ve, as yet, not taken my degrees,
In Cupid’s College, and can’t
justly know:
But will hazard in, for your inspection,
Saving recourse—to all who claim connection! |
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XXIX.
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The fair Lorrain—some used to call
her Lady |
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(I call them all so, out of courtesy,
And yet must say, that I am often ready,
To own the epithet a falsity,)
But now, my pen, a moment pray, be steady—
They are all pretty creatures—certes
I |
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Ever
like to treat them with docility,
For rudeness, Ladies never call civility! [Page
14] |
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XXX.
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Tho’ now a days, one scarce can be polite,
Among Aunt Betty’s Nieces,
or bright eyes
Of mothers’ daughters, and e’en crack
a trite
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Old joke: thro’ which, perchance there might
arise,
A little tittering—but “all’s
not right”—
And Miss is quaintly told—“If
she is wise,
“To be upon her look out”—not
to mention
The cunning hint of “dubious intention:” |
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XXXI.
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With a long sermon on “female propriety,”
Thus ringing thro’ the town
a false alarm;
And altho’ now and then I love variety,
And think that mixing with the world’s
no harm—
To study out the mysteries of society;—
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I must allow, to me, there is no charm,
In seeing every day new fashions, or Ma’s
pet,
Push’d in the face of common sense—a
starch’d coquette! |
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XXXII.
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The fair Lorrain, whose name perforce I give—
And ‘tis a pretty name—and
so was she;
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I’ll
not describe her—tho’ I do believe,
Perhaps a prettier, fairer, ne’er
could be;
Some say there have been—but they must forgive
My deeming them mistaken:—Old
Hebe,
Whom poets tell of, nor yet Grecian Helen,
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Who
with the vagrant Paris so deep fell in [Page
15] |
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XXXIII.
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Love—were never half so lovely I opine.
But I’m no limner—ergo—can’t
paint faces
In common colours, much less in divine,
With the minutia of eyes, lips, grimaces,
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And
the “and so forth,” which we need
combine,
With a fair form, to model for the
graces.
She was of that description—on my life—
I’d choose her counterpart—were I
to choose a wife. |
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XXXIV.
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She lived in Canada—no matter where, |
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It might be a cloistered in a nunnery,
Breathing a life of solitude and prayer,
In sweet seclusion from all revelry.
Or it might be, that she did choose to share
The smiles of an ungrateful world,
and see |
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The
fickleness of man—inconstancy and folly,
Now smiling, angry, gay or melancholly. |
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XXXV.
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“False colours last”—like hints
on beauty’s cheek,
An hour they sparkle like the diamond
bright;
Then fade—their lovely shade in vain we
seek,
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Dimm’d by time’s cruel, unrelenting
blight.
“False friends will smile,” an hour,
a day, a week,
Then friendship, with ingratitude
requite—
And wound the breast that hath too dearly learned,
No pang, is like the pang, of kindness—ill
returned! |
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[Page
16] |
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XXXVI.
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I had a “friend” once, and I
deem’d him all,
That man could or should be—not
what man is,
And has been, e’er since our first parents’
fall
From Eden’s bow’rs—blest
Paradise of bliss.—
But he is changed; what then was friendship’s
call
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Were now a favour to bestow—but ’tis
Not, not that I grieve, the moments past to scan;
I grieve to see th’ inconstancy of man. |
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XXVII.
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I said no matter where she lived—’tis
true—
The where and how do not much signify;
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She
lived—good reader that’s enough
for you—
So pray discard your curiosity:
Since to that secret should you get “the clue,”
You’d think yourself to be, as
wise as I!—
And in an author’s whole vocabulary,
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No
word, than “self-importance” is more
necessary! |
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XXXVIII.
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What say you reader?—Didst e’er read
“Broad grins?”
(It is bound up with “my night
gown and slippers.”)
If you have not, go read it for your sins,
And tell me, if, you’ve e’er,
among verse clippers,
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Found
one could clip more quaintly “Outs and Ins,”
And sometimes nip close as
a pair of nippers.
But reader, if your patience, I’ve borne hard
on,
I must beg leave to beg your patience’s pardon,
[Page 17] |
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XXXIX.
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And then proceed. From some unknown reason, |
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(Love never asks for “reason, nor for rhyme.”)
Baptiste now felt—what will forever tease
one,
When either out of reason, place, or
time.
It was not what is called “domestic treason,”
But a strange feeling rather more sublime:
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Inflammatory
in its variations,
Symptoms:—pulse quick, cheeks hectic, and
heart palpitations! |
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XL.
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He felt, “somehow” a kind of anxious
spell,
And sometimes most sententiously
would sigh.
The ladies did conjecture him unwell,
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Mal-à-la-tête—and hoped
he would not die!
Kind hearted Ladies! I the truth must tell,
I love you, as I love my own right
eye:
Kind and yet cruel, and pray where’s the wonder,
You smile awhile,—then rend men’s hearts
asunder. |
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XLI.
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In truth the world’s a wonder altogether—
And man’s a creature wonderfully
made,—
(And so is woman!) fickle as the feather;
So heathenish philosophers have said,
Made to endure sunshine and rainy weather,
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To love, fear, hope, betray and be betrayed,
And marry too—not till he courts a wife
tho’,
Eat, drink, be merry, some say smoke tobacco.
[Page 18] |
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XLII.
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That is, as one methinks should comprehend it,
To feel quite pleased when things
go “smooth and clever:”
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And
when a little rough, to condescend t’it,
Because to tease, and fret and scold
will never
Lessen an ill, when one cannot forefend it.—
To love when inclination prompts, if
ever
An object worthy of our love be found,—
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To fear;—when any thing the sense confound. |
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XLIII.
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Get married, aye—but more of this ere long—
To eat when one is hungry—drink
when dry,
Be merry when in humour for a song,
That is, when melancholly
is not nigh,
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Peace
reigns within, and nothing seemeth wrong:
In other words, when one feels “very
high,”
Can give and take a joke, and chase hense sorrow,
And keep his conscience harmless for the morrow. |
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XLIV.
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And as for smoking, just as one would please, |
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Joking, I’d relish better, but “you
know,”
Not every one can take things at their ease,
And some are vapid as the chilling
snow,
Cold, murky, saturnine,—and endless tease
One with their nonsense,—dogged,
dull and slow,— |
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I
hate it all, and think that a good smoker,
Should smoke away, and never set up joker. [Page
19] |
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XLV.
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Jean Baptiste lov’d his pipe as well as
any
Man, of like sensibility, could do—
Tho’ not so inordinately as many,
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Who whiff, and puff, and smoke, the whole week
thro’!
Yet when the weather was or dull, or rainy,
He could, at leasure, smoke a pipe
or so:
Which serves (I’m told) to help
one’s cogitations,
And
brighten up dull paced—imagination! |
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XLVI.
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He lov’d a joke—in common acceptation,
When aimed either ’gainst a
foe or friend;
And could laugh heartily in approbation,
When not obliged his batteries to
defend,—
And
perchance give a shout for prolongation;
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When the result no danger did portend;
But for all this—tho’ Baptiste was
“no fool,”
Much did he dread the shafts of ridicule! |
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XLVII.
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And for myself, I think they truly are,
What it requires some patience to endure;
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So
exquisite the pain, we’re forced to bear,
Against our will; (which grieves
us doubly sore;)
And like the rheumatism, that with great care,
And scores of nostrums we can seldom
cure;
But there’s one consolation, if they wound:— |
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“A
dart well parried, may perchance rebound.”
[Page 20] |
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XLVIII.
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If with her shafts—Baptiste was e’er
afflicted,
He would send forth a “genteel
oath or two,”
As anger sate upon his brow depicted,
And deemed them handy as small clothes, altho’
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He
ne’er stark mad profanity affected,
More than such men of quality perforce
do,
Merely to shew an “independant spirit,”
Or man with “wonderful degree of merit.” |
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XLIX.
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Now Baptiste was indeed a “man of state,” |
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Not that he kept a dashy coach and six,
While throngs of minions on his nod await,
But was (not to be tedious or prolix)
A famous politician; and could prate
About the “Civil List,”
and rightly fix, |
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In
his own mind, when to relax and give—
And how to “exercise prerogative.” |
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L.
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“Religion et Liberté”
did much disturb
His meditations, for much did he
fear,
The civil power should dare attempt to curb,
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Or stint him, in the use of blessings, e’er
So just and highly praised,—and our superb
Constitution, which he held so dear,
Might most unluckily be taken from us—
When we might put on sackcloth, or invoke St.
Thomas!
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[Page
21] |
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LI.
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But my good reader, let us veer about.—
I hate all politics, upon my word;
And politicians too, they make such rout
For a mere trifle; tho’ Byron,
you have heard,
Or, I will tell you, could not do without
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Them—(such good wholesome lessons they afford,)
And brought them in, for sake of their variety,
“To stuff with sage that verdant
goose society.” |
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LII.
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Tho’ not professedly a moralizer—
One may presume to lecture, now and
then, |
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E’en
those who are, in truth, much wiser
Than his dear self; since there’s
a class of men,
Who sadly need, a candid, kind adviser,
And, might derive instructions, from
my pen;—
But stop—my pen is bad—and I must
mend it— |
415 |
| |
So
ends the stanza—or this line will end it! |
|
| |
LIII.
|
|
| |
“A love scene and good dinner are fine things”
Among the joys and disappointments
of this life—
And yield “true bliss”—as nature’s
minstrel sings—
If true bliss there may be, where
all is rife
|
420 |
| |
With
vexation, ambition, riotings,
Distrust[,] deceit, contention, woe
and strife;
I hate the former—though as I’m a
sinner,
I dearly love a savoury, wholesome dinner. [Page
22] |
|
| |
LIV.
|
|
| |
And who that does not? but these sad “love
scenes” |
425 |
| |
Awaken recollections in the mind,
Of woeful hours; like grief that intervenes
To mar our dearest blessings, or
some kind
Star, that with gracious influence, half leans,
In palid splendour, and seems not
unkind, |
430 |
| |
But
yields no consolation from that sorrow,
Which waits to canker each returning morrow. |
|
| |
LV.
|
|
| |
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Who has not felt that wasting, pensive feeling,
|
435 |
| |
That springs from young affections sadly crossed,
Over the recollections hourly stealing,
Like the remembrances of some dear
friend lost,
He who hath, knows sorrow—he who hath not,
Has yet, to learn what “cannot be forgot.” |
440 |
| |
LVI.
|
|
| |
I said that Baptiste loved—and loved full
well,
Tho’ not with that soft sensibility,—
Which binds the young heart in Elysian spell,
Or robs it of its calm tranquility,
And of a fairy Eden seems to tell,
|
445 |
| |
Where all is mildness, kindness and docility.
His love, in sooth, was wonderfully curious,
Neither too cold, nor absolutely furious. [Page
23] |
|
| |
LVII.
|
|
| |
‘Twas a strange mixture of that vanity,
Incident to a light fantastic mind,—
|
450 |
| |
Ne’er
sensible of its own inanity—
And natal weakness, and that mongrel
kind
Of feeling, bord’ring on insanity;
And which leaves its feeble votary
blind
To nature’s impulse:—a nameless love
or a, |
455 |
| |
(If
courteous critics will allow,) “lusus
naturæ” |
|
| |
LVIII.
|
|
| |
He lov’d—but sadly was his love returned.—
Lorrain ne’er cheer’d
him with those “anxious smiles,”
Which speak the heart—and in her bosom burn’d
No tender passion, that this life
beguiles
|
460 |
| |
Of
half its woes—but cruelly she spurn’d,
Or seem’d to spurn, his most
assiduous wiles
To please, which griev’d full sore his wounded
heart,
And vexed him, with intolerable smart. |
|
| |
LIX.
|
|
| |
I love to eulogize the sex sincerely—
|
465 |
| |
Their sweetness, kindness, gentleness of soul;
‘Tis said they’re fickle,—yet
I love them dearly:—
I love to dwell on that fond spell
which stole
My young affections; and had nearly
Bereft me of my own weak heart’s
controul; |
470 |
| |
The
warmth of feelings growing to excess,—
In blissful transports words cannot express! [Page
24] |
|
| |
LX.
|
|
| |
O yes,—there are in youth, those happy hours,
Those trembling moments of supreme
delight,
We would not barter for, nor thrones, nor powers,
|
475 |
| |
Nor all that e’er could mock the wand’ring
sight,
Or strike the fancy—could we call them ours,
And safe preserve them, from the
cruel blight,
Of rolling years, which mars our dearest joys,—
Our fondest hopes—and happiness destroys.
|
480 |
| |
LXI.
|
|
| |
But I will check my Pegasus—and draw—
My half-prose-olio to a conclusion.
Perhaps ‘tis faulty—I don’t
care a straw—
Who, or what is not? tho’ I
hate confusion,
And like things uniform, and without flaw—
|
485 |
| |
Or that abound in beauty to profusion,
But who would choose become an analytic,
Merely to please a despicable critic? |
|
| |
LXII.
|
|
| |
I said Lorrain ne’er felt the sweet delight,
Arising from a passion in the breast,
|
490 |
| |
Called
Love—soft agonizing bliss—the bright,
Delirious vision of pure rest—
And holy rapture—but I love to write
The truth,—Baptiste had ne’er
her love possessed;
She loved, (all women do,) and at length married, |
495 |
| |
When
Baptiste found his hopes had all miscarried. [Page
25] |
|
| |
LXIII.
|
|
| |
I know not how it is—but there are those,
Who can, but sadly, these sad ills
endure,
In love affairs—who look moody, morose,
Impatient, melancholly and demure,
|
500 |
| |
As
if no tongue could tell out half their woes,
And no physician their disorder cure;
Or, as if, grief was fetter’d to a mind,
That could not bear one ill of life resigned. |
|
| |
LXIV.
|
|
| |
And there are those who pass regardless over |
505 |
| |
Such disappointments, and with care deface
Each fond remembrance, of a cruel lover,
That, in mind, had long held welcome
place;
Others, some small disquietude, discover,
But strive to bear them with a seeming
grace, |
510 |
| |
And
an assumed fortitude display,
As if ashamed their weakness to betray. |
|
| |
LXV.
|
|
| |
Poor Jean Baptiste had no such fortitude,
No kind resource of soothing consolation,
Arising from within—that might elude
|
515 |
| |
The wasting pang of silent desolation,
That prey’d upon a mind, by love beshrew’d;
Nor soothing hope t’extend
alleviation,—
Or cheer him with her palliating rays—
And shed bright prospects on his future days.
[Page 26] |
520 |
| |
LXVI.
|
|
| |
I cannot say he was “non compos mentis”
But on his brow sat such a woeful look
Of angry sorrow, that ne’er
content is,
You would have thought kind reason had forsook
Her post,—and, as when life’s weak
thread, half spent is,
|
525 |
| |
And seems too slender nature’s throe to
brook.
Awhile he pin’d in melancholly sorrow—
And seem’d life’s every mental grief
to borrow. |
|
| |
LXVII.
|
|
| |
But soon his anguish grew to desperation,
And death only promis’d a quick
release, |
530 |
| |
From
pain and sorrow’s dreadful devastation:—
“The soul must be disbanded—Death
was peace”—
Next came the blasphemous determination—
The fatal, dire, resolve—but
does life cease?
No Sirs—hanging infused such a queer pain,
|
535 |
| |
It
brought him to his senses back again. |
|
| |
LXVIII.
|
|
| |
‘Twas that or else the fall—for in
blunder,
He’d ta’en a ‘kerchief
for the fatal deed,—
Which broke, like Samson’s flaxen cords
asunder,
And kindly eased him down
|
540 |
| |
*
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
*
Much did he grieve, that it had not been stronger,
But, thought it best,—to live a little
longer! [Page 27] |
|
| |
LXIX.
|
|
| |
I’m glad he thought so—glad indeed,— |
545 |
| |
For if he had not—mournful to relate—
Here must have closed my story—with the
deed,
Which would have sealed poor Baptiste’s
wretched fate,
And put a “Finis” to the
Tome:—so speed
Thee yet, my Pegasus,—write—rhyme—but
wait— |
550 |
| |
I
promis’d a respite—or short reprieve—
The weakness of the Ladies’ weak eyes to relieve!
|
|
| |
LXX.
|
|
| |
And so farewell! the kindest friends must part,
And absent feel the silent loneliness,—
The gloomy chasm of an aching heart,
|
555 |
| |
That spurns the proffer of a cold caress!
Awhile farewell!—at this, the tear may start,
And flow—but it hath less of
bitterness,—
Less of the pang, we feel, when fortunes sever
Two fond adoring hearts—in life—forever!
|
560 |
| |
(End
of first Canto.) [Page 28] |
|
| |
JEAN BAPTISTE:—A
Poetic Olio
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
I.
|
|
| |
Oh! Canada—fair land of freedom styled—
Land of the meadow, mountain, hill
and dale;
Of winter stern—spring calm, and summer
mild,
Of sweeping tempest, of soft murm’ring
gale,
I love thy prospects—thy lone forests wild,—
|
5 |
| |
Thy changes, from when winter’s blasts assail,—
To the warm breeze of spring—from loneliness
A field, to summer’s fairest, greenest dress. |
|
| |
II.
|
|
| |
I love thy boundless wastes—thy solitudes,
Where savage man, from savage man may
stray, |
10 |
| |
And
seek, unaw’d—(scarce other care intrudes,)
The scanty pittance of each coming
day;
Without a hope, that present peace deludes,
Of fame or greatness—in his
lonely way—
Content to live—a pilgrim’s life to
roam; |
15 |
| |
Fixed
to no spot—at home—without a home. [Page
29] |
|
| |
III.
|
|
| |
I love thy cataracts and flowing tides—
Thy wild romantic falls—I love—alas!
No more—what woe that fatal word betides—
I lov’d once tenderly—but
let it pass—
|
20 |
| |
I
would forget that time—yet still it glides
Across my memory—as life’s
low glass
Seems running out—remembrance cannot die—
Slow—cankering gangrene of all misery! |
|
| |
IV.
|
|
| |
“Care to our coffin adds a nail” says
Brome, |
25 |
| |
Or Pindar, or some other versifier,—
Whether bedoom’d earth’s dirty face
to roam,
To satiate an ambitious bold desire;
Or cooped up, in our little “house and home,”
Like a poor felon, parson, nun, or
friar,— |
30 |
| |
And
that a “jovial, merry song” (no doubt
Sung o’er a can of ale) “will draw
it out,” |
|
| |
V.
|
|
| |
But “love adds two”—for reader
think the number,
Of melancholly visages you meet,
Heedless of earthly din—as lifeless lumber—
|
35 |
| |
Whene’er you pass along a well lin’d
street,
In our good City:—think of those who slumber—
Beneath the clod, whereon men tread
their feet;
Cut down in life’s young prime, and the
presumption,
That half, perhaps, or more died with a love consumption.
|
40 |
| |
[Page
30] |
|
| |
VI.
|
|
| |
Aye, think of this:—and if you have a heart,
(Or young or old) I pray you guard
it well,
From the assault of bright eyes,—and the
dart
Of wonder working—Cupid, cruel,
fell,
Barbed and keen pointed, to inflict a smart
|
45 |
| |
Which, ‘twere in vain here to attempt to
tell
The anguish—but this much I can assure ye,
That many thousand songs will never cure
ye. |
|
| |
VII.
|
|
| |
Or draw the nail out—I suppose you’d
have it,
By way of keeping up the metaphor.
|
50 |
| |
What
is a metaphor?—But “gutta cavet”—
I stated somewhere back—why,
or what for,
Or what—need not be told—tho’
if you crave it,
Vide Canto first, verse tenth.
Oh, I abhor
These niceties—how much so—and how
ample— |
55 |
| |
I
think my proem a most excellent ensample. |
|
| |
VIII.
|
|
| |
—I love to wander, at the set of sun,
The fair St. Lawrence’s flowing
stream beside,
Now watch her smoothly limpid waters run,
Then list the gurgling, rippling,
rolling tide,
|
60 |
| |
Or
view the proud ship—her long voyage done—
Safe into port, with look majestic
ride,
And furl her unfurl’d sails—her anchor
cast,
Heedless of future, or of dangers past. [Page
31] |
|
| |
IX.
|
|
| |
I love to contemplate the dawning night, |
65 |
| |
When darkness sinks by slow degrees around;
Just so age steals upon the mental sight,
And leaves the intellect in sorrow
bound!
I love to watch pale Luna’s trembling light,
When first she breaks upon night’s
deep profound: |
70 |
| |
Her
rays are brilliant, but evanish soon,
And tell all changeable and fickle as the moon.
|
|
| |
X.
|
|
| |
Ah! then my thoughts turn back to other days,
To home—sweet spot, and fondly
cherish’d too—
To youthful scenes—where fancy still portrays,
|
75 |
| |
The garden, grot, the elm, the shady yew,
The babbling brook that winds along the maze,
Of shrubbery and thorn—the
distant view
Of spreading fields;—the lambkins sporting
there;
MY FATHER’S kindness and my MOTHER’S
care! |
80 |
| |
XI.
|
|
| |
Youth’s glowing hours are sunny hours—in
vain,
We pause, to count them and recount
them o’er,
To watch their fleetness—passing in the
wane!
As the lone mariner looks on
the shore,
We look with trembling vision,—gaze again,—
|
85 |
| |
We sleep—we dream, and wake, they are no
more—
No more delude our fancy—hopeless gone—
Youth’s glowing hours, we call but once
our own. [Page 32] |
|
| |
XII.
|
|
| |
Go look upon the smiling infant—see
What thou hast been—how
beautiful—how fair—
|
90 |
| |
Its
rosy cheek—it runs and smiles, on thee:
Then look upon thy aged parent’s—where
Thou may’st read, what thou, ere long, shalt
be;
For there are wrinkles, and deep
furrows there,—
And lines betokening grief, and days of woe,
|
95 |
| |
And
locks about them like the hoary snow! |
|
| |
XIII.
|
|
| |
Go to the silent tomb—and cast thine eye
Around—and look upon the cold,
damp earth;
Together infants and the aged lie,
In quiet, ‘neath the grassy
turf—no mirth,
|
100 |
| |
Or
riot, heedless laugh, or revelry,
Shall there mock thy meditations;—a
dearth
Of all—but silence and sad thoughts—thoul’t
find;
Youth’s sunny hours shall break not on thy
mind! |
|
| |
XIV.
|
|
| |
Then think not of thy youthful hours—the years |
105 |
| |
Of bye-past-scenes—’tis bitterness
of thought;—
Nay dream not of them—they were full of
tears
Of restlessness—and “hopes
delay’d”—and fraught
With griefs, thy memory tells not of,—and
fears
Of coming woes—but look beyond,
where taught |
110 |
| |
To
soar, faith triumphs o’er death’s
dark, cold bed,
And, all immortal, man no tears shall shed. [Page
33] |
|
| |
XV.
|
|
| |
“Yet there are thoughts that cannot die;”—the
blast
Of keen adversity may keenly sweep,
And blight our young hopes—and the long,
the last
|
115 |
| |
Ling’ring ray, that seem’d awhile
to keep
Its throne within our bosoms, may go past,—
The impress still remains—engraven
deep
Upon the heart,—still thoughts, there are,
that press
Around that “throne of silent loneliness.” |
120 |
| |
XVI.
|
|
| |
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
125 |
| |
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * |
|
| |
XVII.
|
|
| |
Call you it madness to write poetry?
I grant it may be madness to excess,—
|
130 |
| |
But
who loves not soft soothing minstrelsy,
Awakening feelings tongue cannot
express;—
Who does not feel transporting ecstacy—
With dear delusion the whole soul
possess—
List’ning the poet’s sweetly flowing
numbers, |
135 |
| |
Sacred
and pure as “evening’s silent slumbers?”
[Page 34] |
|
| |
XVIII.
|
|
| |
Who does not love the music of the grove,
When warbling songsters chaunt their
notes at eve,
Making sad moan, or telling tales of love,
While rustling groves, in gentle
murmurs heave,
|
140 |
| |
And
thro’ the glade, the sighing breezes move,
And to the throng their little echoes
give?
Or sit and gaze on amoret’s glowing eyes,
As, from her tongue, sweet notes of concord rise? |
|
| |
XIX.
|
|
| |
‘Tis he alone whose bosom never glows, |
145 |
| |
With soft sensations and ethereal joys;
Who hath no tear to sooth a fellow’s woes,
When inward peace corroding grief
destroys;—
He who ne’er tastes that sacred sweet repose,
The calm, compassionative soul enjoys— |
150 |
| |
But
morbid, insensate, unfeeling, slow,—
Content alike life’s joys and sorrows to
forego. |
|
| |
XX.
|
|
| |
But music, poetry, or politicians,
With all their maxims, measures,
tones and feet,
‘Tis much the same; we call those wise physicians,
|
155 |
| |
Who keep the constitution in complete
State of preservation; and those magicians,
Bards or minstrels (choose which
you will ensuite,
As I’m in haste) who with their minstrelsie,
Makes us forget, what sort of folk we be. [Page
35] |
160 |
| |
XXI.
|
|
| |
“There’s music in all things, if men
had ears”—
Says Byron, that is, if men had ears
to hear,
For if they had not, plainly it appears,
The sweetest note that e’er
drew forth a tear,
From maiden fair, as mirth’s obstreperous
cheers,
|
165 |
| |
Or winds that bleakly sweep the forest drear,
Pass o’er the deadly corse, would pass him
by,
Or march of death at midnight—silently! |
|
| |
XXII.
|
|
| |
But while on music, tones and variation,
Let’s vary still—as we’re
not stational;— |
170 |
| |
To
other subjects turn our lucubrations,
Keeping within the sober bounds of
rational;
And tho’, indeed, I like not altercations,
On matters private, learned or national,
Yet, just to see, what one perforce can do, |
175 |
| |
I
shall attempt, to write a verse or two, |
|
| |
XXIII.
|
|
| |
Upon nicknames. And first there’s Jonathan,
A fellow, cunning and “curious”
as “tarnation;”—
Is seldom certain—but to guess, swear, van,
And hit the mark, in “spec.”
or “calculation!”
|
180 |
| |
Which
he will do as well as any can,
Considering his “home-made
education.”
Altho’ ‘tis thought, by those who
ape their betters,
He’ll soon become a “real man
of letters!” [Page 36] |
|
| |
XXIV.
|
|
| |
I’d like to see the matter realized, |
185 |
| |
And, ere while, prove in truth a staunch reality:—
For if, he lov’d the being catechised,
One half as dearly as he loves equality,
In a few years, I would not be surpris’d,
To find him all “refinement”
and “formality,” |
190 |
| |
And
not to imitate his neighbours, speak
Some learn’d lingo—as Hebrew, Latin,
Greek! |
|
| |
XXV.
|
|
| |
There’s stubborn, stiffneck’d, old
“John Bull,”
Who boasts a monstrous deal of common
sense;
It must be blunt, if suited to the skull,
|
195 |
| |
(Which seems of course th’attendant consequence,)
Thick, dogged, and impenetrably dull,
That proves a bulwark in its own
defence:
But, true it is, he is a blustering fellow,
And like most others—knows well when to
“bellow.” |
200 |
| |
XXVI.
|
|
| |
There’s Paddy—a strange compound
of all oddities,
And contrarieties of Bulls and
Blunders,
Which “och! my honey,”—“faith!”
and such commodities,
As wit from reason fancifully sunders—
But Pat’s is a good soul—“odds
‘sblood it is,”—
|
205 |
| |
He loves the Ladies—arrah! and who wonders,
I love them too—Pat is a Lady’s
man—
I would be too,—who would not pray, that
can? [Page 37] |
|
| |
XXVII.
|
|
| |
There’s honest Sawney “ganging
bock again”—
Honest indeed, as honesty now passes—
|
210 |
| |
He
keeps one eye to ’t—(th’other
to his gain)
Or rather half of one—in common
cases,—
Unless it’s sore, and gives him too much pain:—
But Sawney has the soncy bonny lasses,
With rosy cheeks—and they are not so stupid.
|
215 |
| |
As
“nae to ken the wily arts o’ Cupid.” |
|
| |
XXVIII.
|
|
| |
Thus much: Now for the hero of my story—
Poor Baptiste’s love,
which had been so long crescent,
Began to wane—he’d reach’d the
“heighth of glory,”
And seen her splendours passing,
evanescent;
|
220 |
| |
But
luckily escaped the promontory
Of ruin—soon growing convalescent;—
So, by the time a few months had passed over,
He look’d as cheerful—as a field of
clover. |
|
| |
XXIX.
|
|
| |
‘Tis true, he had his mournful recollections,
|
225 |
| |
And bitter visions, that forever tease one.
Oft would he sigh out broken interjections,
And press his bosom, as if just to
ease one
Swelling thought, that recall’d crossed
affections,
And seldom listen’d, or to
“rhyme, or reason:” |
230 |
| |
Regretting
much the want of fortitude,
To bear with patience, or with skill t’elude.
[Page 38] |
|
| |
XXX.
|
|
| |
Oh, Love! to write it makes my heart ache sadly;
In truth, I love to have it ache
a little,—
Not that I’d feel the tender passion madly,
|
235 |
| |
But to remind me that life’s thread is brittle,
And quickly may be snapp’d—I would
not, gladly,
Feel as poor Baptiste did, in every
tittle,
Nor in the outline, but there are sensations—
Most deeply painful with their consolations. |
240 |
| |
XXXI.
|
|
| |
Oh love! or Cupid, with thy well lin’d quiver,
Author of half the misery of this
world;
How oft, the young, romantic mind, to shiver,
Hast thou thy little darts of ruin
hurl’d,
Infusing poison to the poet’s liver,—
|
245 |
| |
Or keenly pointed, at a venture whirled,
Thy wrathful Plenipos, in vengeful rage,
Like the proud warrior of Egyptian age. |
|
| |
XXXII.
|
|
| |
Oh, love—mysterious, heterogeneous, feeling,
Pleasant enough, when no sharp pang
of sorrow, |
250 |
| |
In
painful, gloomy, retrospection stealing
Upon the mind,—beclouding each
to morrow,—
And in mass of torpid grief congealing
The passions, that from faithless
hope, would borrow
Some antidote, to check that perturbation, |
255 |
| |
Which
thrills the soul with silent desolation. [Page
39] |
|
| |
XXXIII.
|
|
| |
Oh Love! minstrel of shady groves and bowers,
Of mountain valley, wood—of
every where;
Sweet harbinger of bliss of bridal flowers,
Connubial rapture, and connubial
care;—
|
260 |
| |
Of
glowing visions,—of kind soothing hours,—
And dark foreboder of forlorn despair!
I would not love—(reason and prudence bid
not)
Could I endure life’s burthen if I did not. |
|
| |
XXXIV.
|
|
| |
So Baptiste thought, at least so ‘twould appear,— |
265 |
| |
He loved full dearly, but this love was slighted,
And hopes long cherished with distrust and fear,
Were cruelly and mercilessly blighted,—
He ponder’d oft—and oft let fall a
tear,
And seem’d as if his spirits
were benighted,— |
270 |
| |
Till
time and chance, true friends to the ill-fated—
His love-impressions quite—obliterated! |
|
| |
XXXV.
|
|
| |
So changeable—so wavering is man;
Full of inconstancy and fickleness;
Chequered with hopes and fears—his narrow
span
|
275 |
| |
Soon wastes away;—now fondness to excess—
Now coldness to reserve. Indeed, to scan
His way, were hard, so given to transgress
All rules: tho’ all, ‘tis said, with
a firm resolution,
May be achiev’d by time and a good—constitution!
[Page 40] |
280 |
| |
XXXVI.
|
|
| |
I can’t say whether ‘twas a year,
or more,
After Baptiste so ‘gregiously
had erred;
At all events, some few months has passed o’er,
Or by or under (which is most preferred,
By learn’d gents) it might have
been a score,
|
285 |
| |
Or less—when to our hero it occur’d:
That tho’ he’d eaten many a wholesome
fish—
“As good remain’d—as
e’er yet grac’d a dish!” |
|
| |
XXXVII.
|
|
| |
Apropos of fishing—alias angling—
Altho’ to fish in “muddy
waters” much, |
290 |
| |
I
ne’er could bear—’tis so like
household wrangling—
(A subject which I ever hate to touch
Upon—it savoureth so much of strangling;)
I really could not object to such
A thing as fishing—in a limpid fountain,— |
295 |
| |
Deep,
clear and bright,—beside some lofty mountain:— |
|
| |
XXXVIII.
|
|
| |
Not in a wood—for of all this world’s
bothers,
I never knew a greater botheration,—
(With just one salvo—which I keep
from others,
Through mere principle,)—than
the sole vexation
|
300 |
| |
Of
being bitten by musquetoes:—who smothers
Then his ire—if I’m
good in calculation,
Would make a second Job, and in the ashes,
Sit down quite patiently, and cut himself in—gashes!
[Page 41] |
|
| |
XXXIX.
|
|
| |
But in the open field—with here and there, |
305 |
| |
A shady elm, or lowly willow bending—
In pensive stillness—reckless of all care,
Or ruthless danger, ruthlessly impending,
I’d wander—while old Sol shone bright
and fair,
His warm beams to the cold earth
lending:— |
310 |
| |
And
it is said—the truth I do not doubt,
One need not fish long, now-a-days,—”to
catch a trout.” |
|
| |
XL.
|
|
| |
—In truth, tho’ Baptiste could not
love another,
Or said as much, it proved quite
au contraire.
So fate would have it,—and not all the pother
|
315 |
| |
Of his reason, (which was indeed très
clair,)
Could a young bud of “infant”
passion smother,
Attempted with the most assiduous
care:—
I would not say—his love was predestined,—
Nor thing of chance—for no true end designed. |
320 |
| |
XLI.
|
|
| |
“I hold the world, but as the world”—a
thing
“Of shreds and patches,”
botched up and mended,
Like an old worn out coat, with scarce a string
Of the original;—and man descended,—
Retaining in descent, but “grief and sorrowing,”
|
325 |
| |
From the first parent:—together blended,
The world and its frail tenant,—and highly
rated,
Would prove, I think, most woefully degenerated.
[Page42] |
|
| |
XLII.
|
|
| |
Things alter cases—cases circumstances—
And circumstances, when combined together,
|
330 |
| |
Affect
strange wonders in our fickle fancies.
Even that insubstantial thing a feather,
Like the proud ship that on the rough surge dances,
Mocking the heavy anchor’s
feeble tether,
Instructs the mind,*
on sober contemplation,
|
335 |
| |
And
feasts, perchance for hours our meditation. |
|
| |
XLIII.
|
|
| |
Thus man’s life passes—and the contrariety,
Of woes, vicissitudes, pain and distress,
He here doth undergo, in sad variety,—
Force him to own it full of bitterness.—
|
340 |
| |
*
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * |
|
| |
XLIV.
|
|
| |
There’s bitterness in youth—tho’
strew’d with flow’rs, |
345 |
| |
It is a wayward, thorny, crooked course,—
Now we recline in soft Elysian bowers,
And drink pure pleasure from its
purest source;
Now we are sad—and disappointment lowers,
And sinks the soul with an o’erwhelming
force. |
350 |
| |
With
all youth’s fervency and ardour bright,
We love—and cherish hopes to feel their
blight. [Page 43] |
|
| |
XLV.
|
|
| |
A heart too tender and that feels too much,
Experience, reason tell is bitterness—
‘Tis bitterness, when fancy’s glowing
touch,
|
355 |
| |
Paints pining sorrow in her saddest dress,
To feel,—(alas why is our nature such,)
We cannot ease the object in distress.
‘Tis bitterness, to see bedew’d with
tears,
A father’s cheek—grown pale with grief
and years! |
360 |
| |
XLVI.
|
|
| |
There’s bitterness in love we can’t
endure,
To know that we have lov’d
and lov’d in vain,
To see the little bark—(in hope made sure,)
That did our dearest, fondest hopes
contain,
And floated on the tide of life secure,
|
365 |
| |
For months,—perhaps for years,—bewreck’d
amain,
On disappointment’s ruthless shoals—and
see
How near allied are love and—misery. |
|
| |
XLVII.
|
|
| |
There’s bitterness in silent dark suspense,
While hope still lingers, and yet scarcely
beams, |
370 |
| |
And
the soul wanders trembling intense,
And seeks her object in lone midnight
dreams,
Or fleeting visions, that deceive the sense,
And mock our sighs with hope’s
delusive gleams!
There’s bitterness in song—and if
I’m right in guessing— |
375 |
| |
The
reader findeth bitterness in my—digressing.
[Page 44] |
|
| |
XLVIII.
|
|
| |
The Lady Rosalie was one of those
Belles Dames, tutor’d
to think, (I know not why)
That married life yielded—no such repose,—
As might be found in sweet celibacy.
|
380 |
| |
“Experiencia
docet”—the maxim goes,—
Which she had had to a staunch certainty:
As she’d nigh reach’d her puberty I
ween,
That is—some eight and twenty winters seen.
|
|
| |
XLIX.
|
|
| |
She bore the stamp, by some esteemed pretty,— |
385 |
| |
Nearly five feet,—but was not over slender;
Her face was comely, her eyes somewhat jetty,
Looked languishing, impassionate
and tender,
And e’en could ogle;—(and pray where’s
the pity?)
In fine, she was so form’d
—one would commend her |
390 |
| |
Tout
ensemble, rather than criticize,—
Tho’ not perhaps, what all would idolize. |
|
| |
L.
|
|
| |
At Church, (she was a Catholic good reader,)
With holy ardour, she devotion paid;
And at the altar seem’d a constant pleader,
|
395 |
| |
Her life, with innocence might be pourtray’d:
I cannot say but, that sometimes indeed, her
Gentle soul from church devotion
strayed;
But when she raised her eyes—so heaven beguiling,—
You’d almost thought you saw an—angel
smiling. [Page 45] |
400 |
| |
LI.
|
|
| |
Matins and Vespers rigidly she kept,
With holy Lent, fasting
and abstinence,
And o’er her pater nosters oft
she wept
“So modestly faisant la
pétinence”…,
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* *
|
405 |
| |
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * |
|
| |
LII.
|
|
| |
I said she pin’d in single blessedness,
Merely because her Ladyship so chose
|
410 |
| |
To
do,—and had her notions to excess;
I could not say exact how many beaux,
There had been, who attachment did possess;—
Of if she’d any—though
one would suppose,
By the account, that at least eight or nine,
|
415 |
| |
Had
bow’d obsequious at her beauty’s shrine. |
|
| |
LIII.
|
|
| |
But let that pass—as they had pass’d
away—
She’d reach’d the years
of prudence and discretion,
And felt that every hour, and every day,
Left her one less—to live—and
the impression,
|
420 |
| |
That
all her youthful beaux and sweethearts gay
Had fled, would often force the sad
confession,
(To private friends) that should she meet an offer,—
Blest be the hand—that first good
luck might proffer. [Page 46] |
|
| |
LIV.
|
|
| |
I know not how—but like all other stories, |
425 |
| |
Of like importance—’twas soon circulated,
From this to that—(like cant of whigs and
tories,)
And came to Baptiste’s ears,
who quite elated,
Appear’d as if he’d yield the ghost
before his
Time was come; and, with impatience,
waited |
430 |
| |
The
happy moment, when he might disclose,
Something that in his anxious breast arose. |
|
| |
LV.
|
|
| |
Think you ‘twas Love?*
it might be nicknamed such,
But on my word I would not call it
so.
Perhaps ‘twas reason, those oft boast so
much,
|
435 |
| |
Who yet can scarce “old Bachelor”
forego,—
And seek a wife—with a promethean touch,
Of itching passion—near akin
to snow;
It might have been dear bought philosophy,—
But what it was it does not signify. [Page
47] |
440 |
| |
LVI.
|
|
| |
Next holiday to church with great devotion—
He went—with look demure, downcast
and lowly;
And in his breast there seem’d a warm emotion,
As loud he sang in chorus sad and
slowly;
And then the Messe did raise such sweet
commotion,
|
445 |
| |
Of heavenly ardour and of fervour holy,
You would have thought (think otherwise who can)
He was, in the reality, a godly man. |
|
| |
LVII.
|
|
| |
Fair Rosalie beheld him with delight,
Joining en messe, with such
a modest grace; |
450 |
| |
Indeed,
she felt enraptured at the sight,
As now and then she caught his glance
apace:
And how it was, she could not tell aright,
She loved to gaze upon his manly
face,
Which, tho’ time had his ravages begun, |
455 |
| |
Appeared
quite seemingly to look upon. |
|
| |
LVIII.
|
|
| |
But soon their ogles and devotion ended;
And, from the sacred structure, home
they went;
Tho’ neither to a conquest yet
pretended,
Still in their breasts some movings
of consent
|
460 |
| |
Appear’d—that
if it e’er should be contended,
That either side had won—each
was content….
—A parley soon commenced—whether on
the same day,
Or not, my present MSS. don’t go to say.
[Page 48] |
|
| |
LIX.
|
|
| |
Whoe’er thought fit to watch the wily motions, |
465 |
| |
Or two such amaratos, throughout the round
Of courtship, midnight revels and devotions,
Need not be told, what harmony was
found
Between them;—nor how full they were of
notions—
Or yet how love caresses did abound— |
470 |
| |
And
those fond raptures and transporting blisses,
The young maid feels who dreams of “lover’s
kisses!” |
|
| |
LX.
|
|
| |
The innocent reserve—the soft impression—
The bashful “wavering look”—the
“blush—enchanting”—
The “stolen glance”—the kind
but coy expression,
|
475 |
| |
And trembling hand—and bosom lightly panting—
As forth was pour’d the dearly
gain’d confession—
And all love’s ensignia were
not found wanting:—
At least according to the letter of the story;—
At all events, ye have the case before ye. |
480 |
| |
LXI.
|
|
| |
Rosalie pass’d full many a sleepless night,—
Or if she slept—’twas
but to dream of bowers,
And shady groves, that calm the lover’s
sight,
Baptiste, the wedding ring
and bridal flowers—
That soon her blushing beauties should bedight.
|
485 |
| |
While Baptiste chid the heavy rolling hours,
And his wild passions seem’d all noise and
riot—
Because, poor soul he could not keep them—quiet.
[Page 49] |
|
| |
LXII.
|
|
| |
Hope, fear, distrust and killing jealousy,
In high rebellion rose:—he’d
felt the pain,
|
490 |
| |
Of
disappointment’s bitter cruelty,
Nor much could wish to be her sport
again…
At length the day arrives—new expectancy,
Tiptoe, his better sense could scarce
restrain:—
Indeed to make a trope of his disease,— |
495 |
| |
He
felt like one barefooted on hot peas!. |
|
| |
LXIII.
|
|
| |
Baptiste had wealth, and did I think make o’er,
Of his abundance, by notarial deed,
Some two three thousand pounds, or more,
To his intended spouse—lest
time, indeed,
|
500 |
| |
Should,
unawares, come knocking at his door,
And prove “the best friend,
is a friend in need;”
‘Twas a good plan—but over and above,
He wished to shew his strong impassioned—love! |
|
| |
LXIV.
|
|
| |
“Precaution is a virtue”—we are
told, |
505 |
| |
I do believe it, as oft demonstrated,
And an acknowledged maxim from of old,—
Among the luckless, prosperous or
ill fated;
And “maxims” and “old
saws” when they unfold,
And leave the path, plainly delineated, |
510 |
| |
Which
we should follow, nothing on earth should hinder,
Our following them—so says Peter Pindar.
[Page 50] |
|
| |
LXV.
|
|
| |
And Peter knew—at least he should have known—
But whether Peter knew, with all
his knowledge,
The law of marriage contracts—it
is not shewn
|
515 |
| |
By his Biographer.—He’d been thro’
College,
But was no F.R.S. himself did own;
Yet might indeed have understood
the tollage
Of London-Bridge;—nor let this shame us,
One may know many things, yet be an ignoramus |
520 |
| |
LXVI.
|
|
| |
On others, *Peter
further saith. “He lies.”
Who says it? Aye, but then be told
the truth,
Of a great king, (and kings are always wise,)
Who, famed for wisdom from his very
youth,
Knew not the “physiology of pies,”
|
525 |
| |
Strange though it doth appear and most uncouth.
For when a “Dumpling” had been set
before him,
He stared, as if a Samuel was to score him |
|
| |
LXVII.
|
|
| |
In pieces, and—you know the tale no doubt—
I shall suppose it—and again
proceed. |
530 |
| |
Those
who have wisdom (many are without,)
Will own, I think, the justness of
my creed,
Altho’ it be not orthodox throughout,
That a good marriage contract is
indeed,
A wise precaution—since to prove I’m
able, |
535 |
| |
Marriage
a “rente viagere at non rachetable,”
[Page 51] |
|
| |
LXVIII.
|
|
| |
Of a man’s patience, or at least, affections,
Which are, “par privilege,
hypothequé.”
And of all bitter, sorry-faced reflections,
That come across one, in life’s
wintry way—
|
540 |
| |
None
are more bitter than those cursed “ejections,”
From an estate—when he has debts
to pay,
And, has not, the “wherewith,” to go
and pay them,—
Nor faithful friend, with timely aid to stay them. |
|
| |
LXIX.
|
|
| |
This by the way.—The lovely blooming bride |
545 |
| |
Appeared in all her robes of beauty drest.—
Her gown was lace, figured and flounced, beside
A plain plush zone encircling her
breast,
(I know not why) a burning crimson dyed:—
A white lace frill, her flutt’ring
bosom prest, |
550 |
| |
A
cap of bobbin-nett—and to complete,
Shoes of the whitest silk bedeck’d her feet. |
|
| |
LXX.
|
|
| |
I’d nigh forgot her downy gloves of kid,
And sparkling clasp that held her
crimson zone,
Whose beauty shone resplendant and unbid,
|
555 |
| |
Bright as the lustre of the diamond stone.
I would add more—but—modesty forbid—
Unless the ring that on her finger
shone—
But not her bridal ring—’twas I suppose
A fond memento of her youthful beaux! [Page
52] |
560 |
| |
LXXI.
|
|
| |
A fancy trinket. But may Heav’n forgive
me,
If in the course of life’s
short chequer’d day,
I give fair Lady (lest she might deceive me,)
Aught than a tender heart; which
if she play
Too rudely with, or slighted—(and believe
me,
|
565 |
| |
That such may n’er occur I often pray,)
Could I retrieve it—and regain possession—
I’d not repent in haste a like—transgression, |
|
| |
LXXII.
|
|
| |
And this—I wish to have well understood—
I mean in love and courtship
|
570 |
| |
*
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * |
575 |
| |
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * |
|
| |
LXIII.
|
|
| |
The Bridegroom’s dress—some small
refinement shew’d,
His coat was black, or of a sombre
hue,
Best superfine—and cut quite à la
mode,—
Vest silk—and “inexpressibles”
of blue,
|
580 |
| |
With
white cravat superbly double bowed—
A wide plain frill, left full as plain
to view—
Pinn’d with a Broach, in which was neatly
set
A little portrait of his niece Josette. [Page
53] |
|
| |
LXXIV.
|
|
| |
The Angélus had toll’d—all
expectation—
|
585 |
| |
‘Twas five—one hour—the fatal
knot is tied—
Hubbub and noise succeed in preparation….
Her bosom throbb’d—flutter’d—she
smil’d—then sigh’d,
While Baptiste look’d all joy and animation—
So soon to have a “blushing,
blooming Bride.” |
590 |
| |
Meantime
the half officious waiting throng,
Chaunted in chorus some obstreperous song. |
|
| |
LXXV.
|
|
| |
I think ‘twas in the gloomy month October,
When rugged Autumn with his winter
shocks,
Made nature’s face look quite downcast and
sober,
|
595 |
| |
Like the lone desert, or rough mountain rocks,
Barren and verdureless; and did unrobe her,
Of her fair garments, and light flowing
locks,—
Indeed she look’d most mournfully baldheaded,
A situation of all others to be dreaded. |
600 |
| |
LXXVI.
|
|
| |
I would not say she wore a wig—but then
Such desolation did her looks pervade—
Such pensive stillness mid the wood and glen,
Save when the piercing blast swept
thro’ the glade,
And echoed from the mountains back again,—
|
605 |
| |
While angry clouds their lengthen’d skirts
display’d—
You’d thought—a bleak Canadian fall,
or winter,—
The worst of times for—Poet or for—Printer.
[Page 54] |
|
| |
LXXVII.
|
|
| |
I do—whether en campagne or en
ville,
They’re very much like Byron’s
poetry—
|
610 |
| |
Now
here—now there—now sideways or uphill,—
Or in a cahot, if there’s
snow d’ye see,—
And if there’s none—why have if you
will,
In mud or ditch, as best it pleases
ye,
Both may be had, or either at your option, |
615 |
| |
As
easy, as a son or daughter—by adoption! |
|
| |
LXXVIII.
|
|
| |
Now off to Church: first in the clan appear,
The fair Bride and fille d’honneur
in their coach;
Follow’d by Jacques, Etienne and Casimir;—
Each as related in the line approach—
|
620 |
| |
While
Jean Baptiste “in tow” brings
up the rear,
While Bazile the groom’s man,
in a Barouche.—
Each blade with Demoiselle of “note
and fame,”
Drove like old Jehu—off to Notre Dame. |
|
| |
LXXIX.
|
|
| |
And
let them go—for me, ‘tis much too early, |
625 |
| |
To go to church—let us suppose it over—
That they are married—and return’d
quite cheerly—
Transformed to “man and wife”
from “sweet and lover.”
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* |
630 |
| |
*
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
*
[Page 55] |
|
| |
LXXX.
|
|
| |
Assembled chez son père we find
Antoine,
The venerable father of our hero;
An only sister the fair Rosaline,
|
635 |
| |
Gallanted by Toussaint her cavilero.
His brothers Hypolite, Ignace and Agueline,
Dandies of the “first water;”—Bombardero
The father with the mother of the bride,
And Angelique, a maiden aunt by mother’s
side. |
640 |
| |
LXXXI.
|
|
| |
There was Pierre Catgut with his bow
and rosin,
And Docteur Crispin whom
the whole world knows,—
With nostrums and prescriptions by the dozen,
To kill or cure—no matter how
it goes—
And there was * * * * Avocat
and cozen,
|
645 |
| |
With “whereas, whys and wherefores, and
ergoes;”
And lots of friends, relations, cousin german,
Than write whose names I’d sooner write
a sermon. |
|
| |
LXXXII.
|
|
| |
Oh ‘twould have done one good to see the shaking
Of hands,—the kissing—wishing
them “much joy.”— |
650 |
| |
No
look downcast—nor bitter sad heart aching
Unless from wounds of Venus—roving
boy.
So like New Year’s—or Christmas merry
making,
Where all is jollity without alloy,
That one could wish, without repentance dreading, |
655 |
| |
This
life were all a Christmas or a wedding. [Page
56] |
|
| |
LXXXIII.
|
|
| |
Vin rouge and Teneriffe—in
great profusion,
With “votre santé
madame,”—”Monsieur
votre,”
Was drank, who bow’d “merci,”—in
sweet delusion,
Of being happier far, than aucune
autre
|
660 |
| |
Mortals
on Terra Firma could be. Confusion
Laughter and mirth, which so much abound
en notre
Assemblées—now echoed throughout the
train,
As if, half Bedlam was let loose again. |
|
| |
LXXXIV.
|
|
| |
But one may drink of pleasure to the brim— |
665 |
| |
And feast with mirth his wild imagination;
Pale hunger comes, with visage wan and grim,
To chase far hence their heartless
fascination:—
And tho’ our souls in bright Elysium swim,
Or seem at least,—we feel his
incitation, |
670 |
| |
And
leave our folly—to become—a fool—
And tho’ all else—we never eat by
rule. |
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LXXXV.
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Here marrying, mirth and kissing could not do—
That guest who comes forever uninvited;—
And digs we’re told, the hedge and stone
wall thro’,
|
675 |
| |
A longing passion in their breasts excited.
‘Twas naught uncommon—yet ‘twas
something new—
Hunger and thirst voraciously united—
And all, at length, old, young, from first to
last,
Sat down, to a good, wholesome, kind repast. [Page
57] |
680 |
| |
LXXXVI.
|
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Imprimis; first there was Bœuf à
la mode,
Stuff’d with good onions, garlicks,
sage and thyme,—
A Jambon ragoo’d,—what is
nothing odd,
Good warm pea soup—(a favourite
dish of mine)
Blood pudding, poudin de Ris, beans in
the pod—
|
685 |
| |
Spices, sweetmeats of ev’ry name and clime.
Their Liquors too were “charmant”
and “superbe,”
Would that I had a glass my muse to curb, |
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| |
LXXXVII.
|
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Or animate; being not of the persuasion,
Who deem a “social drop”
a woeful sin, |
690 |
| |
(Well
weighing the occurrence and occasion,)
After a wedding feast;—a glass
of gin,
Or shrub, or whiskey or—I have evasion—
Tho’ some who good dame Muse’s
smiles would win,
Chose champagne, or madeira,—I would think
most handy, |
695 |
| |
Were
I to have my choice—a glass or two of brandy. |
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LXXXVIII.
|
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A glass or two—I mean just quantum suff;
Tho’, as to that, I would not
be particular;
It stands to reason that “enough’s
enough,”
Since with too much, one can’t
keep perpendicular—
|
700 |
| |
And
surfeiting I hate.—I hate a gruff,
Old toper,—and especially vernacular—
Or otherwise—and finally—of late—
Some things I used to love, I almost hate: [Page
58] |
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LXXXIX.
|
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And vice versa,—but loving or hating, |
705 |
| |
Or this, or that, I must forsooth proceed,
Matters like these, are scarcely worth debating,—
When old Pegasus canters at full
speed,
And the good reader is impatient waiting,
The “finish,”
—I’d nigh forgot it—sad indeed— |
710 |
| |
The
feasting o’er—what follow’d is—uncertain;
For want of facts I’m forc’d to drop
the—curtain! |
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LXXXX.
|
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| |
“La Farce est faite”—my
hero disappears—
Alas! ‘tis thus with all things—transitory;
Carousals, revels, sorrow, grief and tears,
|
715 |
| |
The disappointments of an “old age hoary,”
When, with regret, we view our by-past years,
Must have an end,—as here must
end my—story!
And since it is so—reader be assur’d,
“ A CURELESS MALADY MUST BE
ENDUR’D.” |
720 |
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THE
END. [Page 59] |
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* Should the critical reader
not like my version, he has but to give it one
to suit himself. [back]
† Vide “Prize Address”
spoken at the New Market Theatre in March 1824
[back]
*
“And the money
“Will be mere moonshine,—by and by—tomorrow.”
COLMAN’S TERENCE. [back]
*
CHAUCER, speaking of the inspirer of his number,
says:—
“Her divine skill taught
me this;
“That from every thing
I saw,
“I could some instructions
draw.” [back]
*
As it is a pretty generally received custom among
men of literary habits, never to lose a good opportunity
of displaying the extent and profundity of their
reading,—though of very modest and humble
pretentions, and one who would by no means wish
to be thought “wise over much,” I
cannot well prevail upon myself, on the present
occasion, to omit giving the following quotation
from BUTLER’S HUDIBRAS;—partly for
the aforesaid reason, but more particularly for
the information of the Ladies, whose
respectful votary I hold myself at all times to
be:
“Though Love be all the world’s
pretence,
“Money’s the mythologic sense,
“The real substance of the shadow,
“Which all address and courtship’s
made to.”
Butler says so—but—hem.— [back]
*
“An honest man may be a bitter bad logician.”—SWIFT.
[back]
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