The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 423 pages of information about The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Volume 2.

The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 423 pages of information about The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Volume 2.
No book for delight
Must come in my sight;
But, instead of new plays,
Dull Bacon’s Essays,
And pore every day on
That nasty Pantheon.[4]
If I be not a drudge,
Let all the world judge. 
’Twere better be blind,
Than thus be confined. 
  But while in an ill tone,
I murder poor Milton,
The Dean you will swear,
Is at study or prayer. 
He’s all the day sauntering,
With labourers bantering,
Among his colleagues,
A parcel of Teagues,
Whom he brings in among us
And bribes with mundungus. [He little believes
How they laugh in their sleeves.]
Hail, fellow, well met,
All dirty and wet: 
Find out, if you can,
Who’s master, who’s man;
Who makes the best figure,
The Dean or the digger;
And which is the best
At cracking a jest.
[Now see how he sits
Perplexing his wits
In search of a motto
To fix on his grotto.]
How proudly he talks
Of zigzags and walks,
And all the day raves
Of cradles and caves;
And boasts of his feats,
His grottos and seats;
Shows all his gewgaws,
And gapes for applause;
A fine occupation
For one in his station! 
A hole where a rabbit
Would scorn to inhabit,
Dug out in an hour;
He calls it a bower. 
  But, O! how we laugh,
To see a wild calf
Come, driven by heat,
And foul the green seat;
Or run helter-skelter,
To his arbour for shelter,
Where all goes to ruin
The Dean has been doing: 
The girls of the village
Come flocking for pillage,
Pull down the fine briers
And thorns to make fires;
But yet are so kind
To leave something behind: 
No more need be said on’t,
I smell when I tread on’t. 
  Dear friend, Doctor Jinny. 
If I could but win ye,
Or Walmsley or Whaley,
To come hither daily,
Since fortune, my foe,
Will needs have it so,
That I’m, by her frowns,
Condemn’d to black gowns;
No squire to be found
The neighbourhood round;
(For, under the rose,
I would rather choose those)
If your wives will permit ye,
Come here out of pity,
To ease a poor lady,
And beg her a play-day. 
So may you be seen
No more in the spleen;
May Walmsley give wine
Like a hearty divine! 
May Whaley disgrace
Dull Daniel’s whey-face! 
And may your three spouses
Let you lie at friends’ houses!

[Footnote 1:  Lady Acheson.]

[Footnote 2:  See ante, p.94 W.—­W.  E. B.]

[Footnote 3:  Added from the Dean’s manuscript.]

[Footnote 4:  “The Pantheon,” containing the mythological systems of the Greeks and Romans, by Andrew Tooke, A.M., first published, 1713.  The little work became very popular.  The copy I have is of the thirty-sixth edition, with plates, 1831.  It is still in demand, as it deserves to be.  Compare Leigh Hunt’s remark on the illustrations to the “Pantheon,” cited by Mr. Coleridge in his notes to “Don Juan,” Canto I, St. xli, Byron’s Works, edit. 1903.—­W.  E. B.]

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.