The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 638 pages of information about The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood.

The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 638 pages of information about The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood.

I hear the watchmen on their beats,
Hawking the hour about the streets. 
  Lord! what a cruel jar
It is upon the earth to light! 
Well—­there’s the finish of our flight! 
  I’ve smoked my last segar!

A FRIENDLY ADDRESS TO MRS. FRY IN NEWGATE.[21]

  “Sermons in stones.”—­As You Like It.
  “Out! out! damned spot!”—­Macbeth.

[Footnote 21:  Elizabeth Fry had set up her school for the children in Newgate as early as 1817.  Moll Brazen, Suky Tawdry, Jenny Diver, and the rest, are names borrowed from Gay’s Beggars’ Opera.]

I.

I like you, Mrs. Fry!  I like your name! 
It speaks the very warmth you feel in pressing
In daily act round Charity’s great flame—­
I like the crisp Browne way you have of dressing,
Good Mrs. Fry!  I like the placid claim
You make to Christianity,—­professing
Love, and good works—­of course you buy of Barton,
Beside the young Fry’s bookseller, Friend Darton!

II.

I like, good Mrs. Fry, your brethren mute—­
Those serious, solemn gentlemen that sport—­
I should have said, that wear, the sober suit
Shap’d like a court dress—­but for heaven’s court. 
I like your sisters too,—­sweet Rachel’s fruit—­
Protestant nuns!  I like their stiff support
Of virtue—­and I like to see them clad
With such a difference—­just like good from bad!

III.

I like the sober colors—­not the wet;
Those gaudy manufactures of the rainbow—­
Green, orange, crimson, purple, violet—­
In which the fair, the flirting, and the vain, go—­
The others are a chaste, severer set,
In which the good, the pious, and the plain, go—­
They’re moral standards, to know Christians by—­
In short, they are your colors, Mrs. Fry!

IV.

As for the naughty tinges of the prism—­
Crimson’s the cruel uniform of war—­
Blue—­hue of brimstone! minds no catechism;
And green is young and gay—­not noted for
Goodness, or gravity, or quietism,
Till it is sadden’d down to tea-green, or
Olive—­and purple’s giv’n to wine, I guess;
And yellow is a convict by its dress!

V.

They’re all the devil’s liveries, that men
And women wear in servitude to sin—­
But how will they come off, poor motleys, when
Sin’s wages are paid down, and they stand in
The Evil presence?  You and I know, then,
How all the party colors will begin
To part—­the Pittite hues will sadden there,
Whereas the Foxite shades will all show fair!

VI.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.