Still anxious to secure
your partial favour,
And not less anxious,
sure, this night, than ever,
A Prologue, Epilogue,
or some such matter,
’Twould vamp my
bill, said I, if nothing better;
So sought a poet, roosted
near the skies,
Told him I came to feast
my curious eyes;
Said, nothing like his
works was ever printed;
And last, my prologue-business
slily hinted.
“Ma’am,
let me tell you,” quoth my man of rhymes,
“I know your bent—these
are no laughing times:
Can you—but,
Miss, I own I have my fears—
Dissolve in pause, and
sentimental tears;
With laden sighs, and
solemn-rounded sentence,
Rouse from his sluggish
slumbers, fell Repentance;
Paint Vengeance as he
takes his horrid stand,
Waving on high the desolating
brand,
Calling the storms to
bear him o’er a guilty land?”
I could no more—askance
the creature eyeing,
“D’ye think,”
said I, “this face was made for crying?
I’ll laugh, that’s
poz-nay more, the world shall know it;
And so, your servant!
gloomy Master Poet!”
Firm as my creed, Sirs,
’tis my fix’d belief,
That Misery’s
another word for Grief:
I also think—so
may I be a bride!
That so much laughter,
so much life enjoy’d.
Thou man of crazy care
and ceaseless sigh,
Still under bleak Misfortune’s
blasting eye;
Doom’d to that
sorest task of man alive—
To make three guineas
do the work of five:
Laugh in Misfortune’s
face—the beldam witch!
Say, you’ll be
merry, tho’ you can’t be rich.
Thou other man of care,
the wretch in love,
Who long with jiltish
airs and arts hast strove;
Who, as the boughs all
temptingly project,
Measur’st in desperate
thought—a rope—thy neck—
Or, where the beetling
cliff o’erhangs the deep,
Peerest to meditate
the healing leap:
Would’st thou
be cur’d, thou silly, moping elf?
Laugh at her follies—laugh
e’en at thyself:
Learn to despise those
frowns now so terrific,
And love a kinder—that’s
your grand specific.
To sum up all, be merry,
I advise;
And as we’re merry,
may we still be wise.
Complimentary Epigram On Maria Riddell
“Praise Woman
still,” his lordship roars,
“Deserv’d
or not, no matter?”
But thee, whom all my
soul adores,
Ev’n Flattery
cannot flatter:
Maria, all my thought
and dream,
Inspires my vocal shell;
The more I praise my
lovely theme,
The more the truth I
tell.
1794
Remorseful Apology
The friend whom, wild
from Wisdom’s way,
The fumes of wine infuriate
send,
(Not moony madness more
astray)
Who but deplores that
hapless friend?