Sit silent, then, that my pleased soul may see
A judging audience once, and worthy me;
My faithful scene from true records shall tell,
How Trojan valour did the Greek excel;
Your great forefathers shall their fame regain,
And Homer’s angry ghost repine in vain. 40
* * * * *
XXV.
PROLOGUE TO “CAESAR BORGIA;"[54]
BY NATHAN LEE, 1680.
The unhappy man, who once has trail’d
a pen,
Lives not to please himself, but other
men;
Is always drudging, wastes his life and
blood,
Yet only eats and drinks what you think
good.
What praise soe’er the poetry deserve,
Yet every fool can bid the poet starve.
That fumbling lecher to revenge is bent,
Because he thinks himself or whore is
meant:
Name but a cuckold, all the city swarms;
From Leadenhall to Ludgate is in arms:
10
Were there no fear of Antichrist, or France,
In the bless’d time poor poets live
by chance.
Either you come not here, or, as you grace
Some old acquaintance, drop into the place,
Careless and qualmish, with a yawning
face:
You sleep o’er wit, and, by my troth,
you may;
Most of your talents lie another way.
You love to hear of some prodigious tale,
The bell that toll’d alone, or Irish
whale.
News is your food, and you enough provide,
20
Both for yourselves, and all the world
beside;
One theatre there is of vast resort,
Which whilome of Requests was called the
Court;
But now the great Exchange of News ’tis
hight,
And full of hum and buzz from noon till
night.
Up stairs and down you run, as for a race,
And each man wears three nations in his
face.
So big you look, though claret you retrench,
That, arm’d with bottled ale, you
huff the French.
But all your entertainment still is fed
30
By villains in your own dull island bred.
Would you return to us, we dare engage
To show you better rogues upon the stage.
You know no poison but plain ratsbane
here;
Death’s more refined, and better
bred elsewhere.
They have a civil way in Italy,
By smelling a perfume to make you die:
A trick would make you lay your snuff-box
by.
Murder’s a trade, so known and practised
there,
That ’tis infallible as is the Chair.
40
But mark their feast, you shall behold
such pranks;
The Pope says grace, but ’tis the
Devil gives thanks.
* * * * *
FOOTNOTES:
[Footnote 54: ‘Caesar Borgia:’ a play produced about the time of the Popish Plot.]