“‘There lies my Boy,’
he cried, ’of care bereft,
And, Heaven be praised, I’ve not
a genius left:
No one among ye, sons! is doomed to live
On high-raised hopes of what the Great
may give.’”
Crabbe, who is nothing if not incisive in the drawing of his moral, and lays on his colours with no sparing hand, represents the heartless Patron and his family as hearing the sad tidings with quite amazing sang-froid:
“Meantime the news through various
channels spread,
The youth, once favour’d with such
praise, was dead:
‘Emma,’ the Lady cried, ’my
words attend,
Your siren-smiles have kill’d your
humble friend;
The hope you raised can now delude no
more,
Nor charms, that once inspired, can now
restore’
Faint was the flush of anger and of shame,
That o’er the cheek of conscious
beauty came:
‘You censure not,’ said she,
’the sun’s bright rays,
When fools imprudent dare the dangerous
gaze;
And should a stripling look till he were
blind,
You would not justly call the light unkind;
But is he dead? and am I to suppose
The power of poison in such looks as those?’
She spoke, and pointing to the mirror,
cast
A pleased gay glance, and curtsied as
she pass’d.
My Lord, to whom the poet’s fate
was told,
Was much affected, for a man so cold:
‘Dead!’ said his lordship,
’run distracted, mad!
Upon my soul I’m sorry for the lad;
And now, no doubt, th’ obliging
world will say
That my harsh usage help’d him on
his way:
What! I suppose, I should have nursed
his muse,
And with champagne have brighten’d
up his views,
Then had he made me famed my whole life
long,
And stunn’d my ears with gratitude
and song.
Still should the father hear that I regret
Our joint misfortune—Yes!
I’ll not forget.’”


