BIRCH FOR PETER PINDAR, Esq. A BURLESQUE POEM.
BY PINDAROMASTIX.
—STULTA EST CLEMENTIA CUM TOT UBIQUE
VATIBUS OCCURRAS, PERITURAE PARCERE CHARTAE.
JUV.
LONDON: PRINTED FOR G. G. J. AND J. ROBINSON, PATERNOSTER-ROW.
M.DCC.LXXXVIII.
TO THE CRITICAL REVIEWERS.
O YOU who high on learned benches sit,
Dread arbiters of dulness and of wit,
Whose task it is to mark with eagle eye
Where poets sink too low, or soar too high,
Judge well my
ups and
downs, my wit and metre,
And swear that Pindar's self was never greater;
But ah! you won't, for none can please like Peter.
In Peter's praise you're louder still and louder,
I fear that rogue has giv'n you all
love-powder.
O say, dread sirs, what
Sop in Pan will please you;
Will fattest haunch of buck or doe appease you?
Shall rump and dozen speedily be sent you?
Shall pheasant, hare, and partridge, compliment you?
What Bard can bribe with Sop of
*
better savour?
Nor you reject a poet's proffer'd favour;
Then, grateful, deign a little helping puff,
One gentle blast from you would be enough.
Say but, the work's
replete with wit and fun,
Quick thro' the land, like wild-fire, it would run,
And ere the moon her circling course had roll'd,
Two thousand copies would be fairly sold.
In my good luck you all should have a share,
And, sure, you'll own such offer's very fair.
—Perchance your doublets, sirs, are waxing bare—
—Perchance your linen wants some small repair—
Or if your hats of G—e the Second's reign,
Too long expos'd to sun, and wind, and rain,
Have lost their stiff'ning and their jetty hue,
Your learned heads I'd straightway crown anew;
No longer should your shabby garb proclaim
Neglected merit, and a nation's shame.
T' equip you all genteelly,
comme il faut,
On R—ns our friends, I'd boldly draw;
Nor fear dishonour of protested bill
'Midst rapid sale of
Birch, and thriving till.
But if ten thousand copies once were sold,
Your brazen-headed canes should blaze with burnish'd gold.
And now, dread sirs, if all this will not win you,
Why then, dread sirs, the D—l, sure, is in you.
But neither
you nor
he, my sportive Muse shall hinder,
I
will have one more slap at wicked Peter Pindar.
BIRCH FOR PETER PINDAR, ESQ. &c.
AH well-a-day!
Ah well-a-day!
What shall I say?
What shall I say?
Ah! in what dictionary shall I find
Meet words to vent the grief that labours in my mind?
O Muse! a hapless brother Bard deplore,
Who's fallen, fallen, fall'n to rise no more.
Mourn all ye friends of Peter and of fun,
Mourn very hard indeed—and when ye've done,
[Page 2]Come listen to my lay,
And mind what I've to say.
Now you must know this cock of rhyme
Was hatch'd in some unlucky time.
Some planet of malignant pow'r
Presided o'er his natal hour.
I see, I see
The Fates decree,
Or do or say whate'er we can
To serve this poor unhappy man,
Some dire disaster must attend,
And so he'll come to no good end.
You know,
* at Court I got him plac'd,
But now he's ousted and disgrac'd.
Did I not give him good advice,
And that not once, but twice or thrice?
[Page 3]But all advice, I fear, is vain,
The rogue has been at his old tricks again.
Nay, what is worse than all that's past,
He now is held in durance fast;
As you will hear, if you'll attend
The following story to its end.
Scarce had he warm'd himself at Court
Before he fell to wicked sport.
Well fed and cloth'd, he there begun
To play all sorts of wanton fun.
Complaints were brought from ev'ry quarter—
—One while he'd steal a maid of honour's garter,
And by such flatt'ring token prove
How high he stood in maiden's love.
Another while, perdue as dead
He'd couch 'neath maid of honour's bed,
As if intent on nightly wickedness;
But now I'm well assur'd 'twas nothing less.
That he could do no mischief there,
(I mean in maid of honour's bed)
For all his mischief's in his head.
In ambush thus he only lay
To hear what they in sleep would say,
And then forsooth the wag would run
And tell their secrets all in fun.
On this the maidens all combin'd,
And in petition formal join'd
With loud complaints against our Bard,
Declaring it was very hard
That he their private chambers should invade,
And hear what they in midnight dreaming said;
Such test was far too much for any mortal maid.
Of waking maids, all own, there are great numbers;
But ah! what earthly maid can answer for her slumbers?
[Page 5]But what they most of all things fear'd,
Was, that he'd publish all he heard.
They knew that Peter had a tattling tongue,
Which blabb'd out all, but chief if aught was wrong.
Should he in nightly ambuscade discover
That they, in sleeping fancy only, had a lover,
Of courtly maids, this sland'rous tale
In Peter Pindar's Ode would stand,
And fly forthwith in Palmer's mail
To all the gossips in the land.
In short—if he must be indulg'd in such-like sport,
The sisters, one and all, resolv'd to quit the Court.
The virtuous maidens rueful plaints were heard,
And full of reason and of truth appear'd.
Peter was question'd on these heads
Of maidens garters and their beds,
Was by his master reprimanded,
And to his proper post remanded,
[Page 6]With charge, no more to be so rude
As thus indecently t' intrude,
To gratify a curious whim;
For maids or not, what was't to him?
But not the virtuous maids alone,
His fellow-servants ev'ry one
Complain'd of saucy Peter,
His gibing and his metre.
But chief of all the Laureat-Bard
With reason good averr'd, 'twas hard
That he could never make a Birth-day Song
To 'scape the witty malice of his tongue.
That when he did his very best,
Of all his words, he'd make a jest.
Oft as he form'd a sober rhyme,
Or strove to soar in verse sublime,
The rogue was sure to mock him with another,
And now would call him Tom, and now would call him Brother.
[Page 7]Long had he borne his arch grimace,
But now grew weary of his place.
Rather than be the butt of monkey Peter,
He'd quit the trade, and deal no more in metre.
To fly from such intol'rable attack,
He'd forfeit both his bays, and marks, and sack.
Of chaplains all he'd make a jest,
For Peter never lov'd a priest.
He always was a very wicked boy,
And never would the Sabbath-day employ
In conning over
*
Bible-phrase sublime;
His Sabbaths all were giv'n to fiddling and to rhyme.
His mother told him 'twas a shameful thing
To make such wicked songs about his K—g.
Ah! son, she'd say, 'twill bring thee to the gallows,
As sure as spending Sabbath-day in ale-house.
[Page 8]And as he added year to year,
He more and more alarm'd her fear,
Lest he should take to wicked ways,
And in a halter end his days.—
—But after this digression short,
Let's now resume our thread at Court,
And Peter's farther pranks report.
Bed-chamber lord or page in waiting
Was sure to bear his waggish baiting.
Whoever came to Court
Was Peter's butt and sport.
At ev'ry human ailing,
At ev'ry human failing,
Whether halt, or blind, or lame,
He'd loll his tongue, and make his game.
With hasty speech, and utt'rance quick,
He'd play you ev'ry monkey trick.
[Page 9]'Tis said his r—l master didn't escape
The mimic wagg'ry of this rhyming ape.
At length the courtiers, one and all,
Determin'd to effect his fall.
And yet the question may admit of doubt,
Wheth'r all their efforts could have got him out;
So much his master lov'd him,
Till he a traitor prov'd him.
Now, gentle reader, let us straight repair
To council-hall, and learn what passes there.
And merry people all, throughout the nation,
Pray listen to this droll examination.
[Page 10]P—y C—l met.
Lord Testy thus addresses the Board.
My Lords, you're summon'd here
A horrid tale to hear,
Of Peter Pindar's dark design
(Which calls for punishment condign)
To kill the K—g, enslave the nation,
And bring us all to desolation.
Battalions thick in armour stood,
Prepar'd t' embark and shed our blood,
To force our wives, our fortunes to devour,
And bring in Popish faith and arbitrary pow'r.
I wish this dev'lish imp of rhyme
Could be hang'd now—'twould save our tin
But this is not our English way,
For ev'ry rogue must have fair play.
In our proceedings let there be no flaw;
The culprit must be hang'd by reg'lar course of law.
[Page 11]A Frenchman appears before the C—l to inform against Peter Pindar.
Ld. T—y.
Where is this Frenchman? If he's in the way,
We now will hear what he has got to say.
But French I do not understand;
Is no interpreter at hand?
Interpreter.
O, oui, Milor, and 'tis pour dat I'm here.
Ld. T—y.
O, are you so?—a fine interpreter!
Why man, you nought but French can splutter;
I'm sure you can't two words of English utter.
Interp.
O, my good Lor, you please, pardonnez moi;
Der is long time I am in dis emploi,
Pour all my contremen dat come from France,
Pour civilize your peuple, and for teach de dance.
Ld. T—y, aside.
Confound your French impertinence!
But for a moment—truce with impudence.
Well; first of all, what's this man's name, d'ye say?
Interp.
Milor, son nom, his name, be
*Parler Vrai.
Ld. T—y.
[Page 12]
Now, your name, Monsieur, if you please?
Interp.
* Interpreteur fidele, bien a votre service.
Ld. T—y.
Who is this Parler Vrai, Monsieur?
Interp.
Milor, attendez, you shall hear.
Milor, he have de grand bonheur
To be un gentilhomme d'honeur.
Ld. T—y.
Indeed? Then, if you please, let's hear
What bus'ness brought
his honour here.
Interp.
Milor, to Londres he have come pour his plaisir,
And 'tis pour dat, Milor, he is in England here.
Ld. T—y.
And pray what might he do in his own nation?
Had he no sort of trade or occupation?
Interp.
Milor, when he do live in his own place,
He acammode de head, and shave de face.
Ld. T—y.
I thought as much:—you know him?—
—Interp.
O que oui.
Monsieur be my good friend, mon bon ami.
Ld. T—y.
[Page 13]
O, is he so?—Then let this Parler Vrai
Speak out, and tell us what he has to say.
Interp.
to P. V.
A present parlez haut & parlez tout.
Ld. T—y.
What's that?—
—Interp.
Milor, I tell him to speak out.
Parler Vrai
deposes.
Quand j'étois à la cour de France
Je faisois très-grande connoissance.
Et j'avois aussi le bonheur
De travailler chez un friseur,
Un homme d'esprit & de bon Sens
Qui coiffoit
* l'Archevêque de Sens.
Il connut aussi bien son sécretaire
Qui lui racontoit une etrange affaire,
D'un certain drole ici en grand emploi,
Même
accoucheur, il avoit dit, a Roi.
Ld. T—y
[Page 14]
interrupting.
Hark ye, Monsieur Interpreter!
Pray check
his honour's glib career,
Or else of all this length'ning tale
We ne'er shall make or head or tail.
Before
his honour further goes,
You'll please t' explain in verse or prose,
To satisfy each English head
Of what he has already said.
As soon as this is clearly done,
You'll bid
his honour then go on;
But please to stop him now and then,
(I leave to your discretion, when)
And give the English sense, as well as you are able,
Or else 'twill be confusion all, like tow'r of Babel.
Interp.
Milor, I vil de English meaning tell,
And you shall say, I speak your language well.
Milor, when at de court of France
He say he make grand acquaintance,
[Page 15]And dat he have de happiness
To work vid one friseur who dress
De peruque, and who shave de face
Of Monseigneur de Sens his grace;
Which courtier have good sense to tell
When he do hear some ting nouvelle.
And dat Milor of Sens his secretaire
Did one day tell him of one strange affaire,
Of some droll fellow in your nation
En grand emploi and occupation,
Who say dat he have de honneur
To be your K—g his
accoucheur.
Ld. T—y interrupting.
Why, what the d—l's
that, Monsieur?
Interp.
Patience, Milor, and you shall hear:
It is for make accouche your K—g,
When he want do one certain ting.
Dat be one drole affaire, ma foi,
To make accoucher un gros Roi,
Like when
your wife, Milor, accouche for little boy.
[Page 16]Instant on this, burst forth such loud uproar
As ne'er was heard at C—l Board before;
Beards, wigs, and noses, wagged all,
And unextinguish'd laughter shook the hall.
Not more when merry Gods above
Surround the festal board of Jove;
While nectar and ambrosia crown the feast,
And
Peter Pindar cracks his witty jest.
P. V.
to Interp. aside.
Mais pourquoi fait-on tant d'eclat de rire?
Interp.
Mon ami, o'est la mode en Angleterre.
Ld. T—y.
Come, leave your prattling—if you don't go on
With this curs'd bus'ness, we shall ne'er have done.
Interp.
to P. V.
De finir ce rapport, depechez vous,
Monsieur en grand peruque est faché contre nous.
Parler Vrai
proceeds.
Je dis qu'un drole ici en grand emploi,
Même accoucheur, il avoit dit, a Roi,
Pindar son nom, son nom de Baptême
Pierre,
Il avoit bien écrit, que le derrière
[Page 17]Du Roi ici il garde—la clef pour cela il tient—
Et que sans lui le Roi ne jamais feroit rien.
Interp.
Dat is, Milor, dis Peter Pindar
He write, dat he your K—g can hinder
From do one certain ting when he have mind,
Because he keep de key of his
behind.
On this Lord T—y gave him
such a look!
But not a nerve of dauntless Peter shook.
Parler Vrai continues.
Et que pour pension bonne de dix mille livres
Pour lui apprêter, comme il faut, des vivres,
Il sera prêt de fermer bien son Roi
En sorte qu'il ne fasse rien pour tout un moi,
Pendant ce temps lequel est bien critique
Pour servir à leurs plans de politique.
Interp.
Dat is, Milor, dis Peter Pindar mention
If dey vil give five hundred pound of pemsion,
Dat he may have roast-beef and wine,
(On which he dearly love to dine)
[Page 18]He vil not let your England K—g
Pour tirty day do dat same ting;
By dis to give some better chance
To serve de politique of France.
Ld. T—y.
Bravo! Interpreteur fidele,
Thou dost thy office very well.
Now let thy brother Parler Vrai
Declare what more he has to say.
Interp.
Milor, I know he have no more to tell.
Ld. T—y.
Then you'll withdraw—so far we go on well.
Ld. T—y,
addressing P. Pindar.
So!—here are pretty doing, master Peter—
—Since first I heard of thee and thy d—n'd metre,
I've all along had some fore-boding thought
That stocks or pillory would be thy lot;
But hanging now, I see, and nothing less
Will serve thy turn:—Come then; thou'dst best confess.
Thou'lt save much cost by such a resolution,
And ease us of the plague of prosecution.
Peter,
[Page 19]
intrepidly.
Hold, hold, my Lord; not quite so fast!
If
you are,
I am not in haste.
I've some small skill in law as well as rhyme,
And mean t' avail myself of further time.
I'm not to be brow-beaten so
In ev'ry action that I do:
I know how far 'tis safe to go.
Produce your Frenchman—let him swear
To any given day or year,
I'll prove that at the very time
I was employ'd in making rhyme,
Or making up a pill,
Or bolus, which you will.
Next, let him swear to place—then I
Will swear and prove an
alibi.
Think not I'm so abandon'd and forlorn,
I've ne'er an affidavit-friend to serve a turn,
If letters sign'd by me are brought to light,
I'll prove that I can neither read nor write,
[Page 20]And, spite of you and all your law,
I'll save my bacon by some flaw.
Ld. T—y.
Was ever impudence a match for this!
Quondam empiric! say'st thou, common Fame?
No, no, thou'rt wrong in thy hypothesis;
Old
Rock himself was ne'er so void of shame.
Some quondam scrivener, I ween,
Of brazen front, and perjur'd tongue,
To lie and swear thro' thick and thin,
And make the rightful cause appear the wrong.
But, Peter, trust not to thy skill
In quirks and quibbles of the law;
I'll squeeze thee in attainder's bill;
Where's then thy bacon-saving flaw?
Peter.
Well; if I must be hang'd, I must;
All men must die, and come to dust.
Then what imports it, when or where,
Or soon or late, or here or there?
[Page 21]Reclin'd on couch, or propp'd in easy chair,
Or pendent high in ambient field of air?
No form of death can scare your dauntless bard;
I'll kiss my friend the hangman, and
die hard.
Ld. T—y.
Well, Peter, justice shall be done thee,
Whatever judgment falls upon thee.
Meanwhile I'd have thee better spend thy time,
And leave off this bad trade of making rhyme.
Peter
intrepid to the last.
No, that, my Lord, I surely will not do;
I'll make one more d—n'd ode for you.
Insult not o'er my fallen state,
Perhaps yourself, or soon or late,
May fall like me—it was the ca
[...]
Of better men who held your place.
The losing gamesters by and by may win,
Ins may go out, and
outs once more come in.
And oh!
If so,
[Page 22]Then your fell foe
Will work your woe.
Impeachments thick
Will follow quick,
And make you kick
Against the prick;
But F—x will stick
As close as tick,
Nor quit you till he sends you to old Nick.
Ld. T—y,
aside.
Sure never impudence on this side Hell
This rascal Peter Pindar's did excel.
Addressing the C—l.
My Lords, this is a horrid, horrid thing,
A foul conspiracy against the K—g,
To stop the passage of his r—l life,
I do not say by poison or by knife,
But by a method still more deep and dark,
Such as would leave no indicating mark,
Nor aught of outward symptom that might lead
To trace the author of such shocking deed.
[Page 23]My Lords, in all my reading,
My Lords, in all my pleading,
A case in point I never knew,
The case is altogether new.
Search all King-killing cases,
The Jesuits were but asses,
Compar'd with this
astrictive fellow Peter—
—D—n'd
costive in his plot, however
lax in metre!
My Lords, I freely own I'm no physician,
I cannot speak with Warwick-lane precision—
Nor
Galen nor
Hippocrates my book,
But old black-letter
Littleton with
Coke.
But lawyers, sure, may have as good pretence
As any other men to common sense.
Allow me this, and I can reason give
Why in such case no mortal man can live.
To shut such channel must be certain death,
Not more so, stopping up the vital breath.
[Page 24]How long such case might go, I will not say,
I cannot fix the limits to a day;
But to my reason it appears most plain
That half a month would kill the stoutest man.
And sure, you'll own, my Lords, in such-like ail
The K—g's prerogative can nought avail.
In cases of evacuation,
And ev'ry other operation
Pertaining to our common frame,
The r—l functions are the same
With those which Nature calls from you and me:
In this, my Lords,
at least, I trust, we all agree.
Then from your own experience freely speak,
And say what man among you ever
went a week.
This said, a gentle murm'ring sound
Of hear him! hear him! circled round,
Re-echoed by a large majority,
Tho' not unanimous the fav'ring cry.
[Page 25]The
Scottish corps, in deepest wonder,
All sat amaz'd, as struck with thunder,
To hear Lord T—y talk at such a rate—
Then crowding all together tête à tête,
Their
notes posterior they compar'd,
And all with one consent declar'd
Such argument was void of sense,
And counter to their
own experience.
Some said the mon was mad—but all agreed
He'd got a glass o' whisky in his head.
At length Tweed-side on T—y fix'd his eye,
And holding forth his leg, up-rose to make reply
Ld. Tweed-side.
Hoot mon, ye talk just like a fule
I'll send ye cross the Tweed to schule,
And there ye'll see our bonny lads can gang
Without the like o' this the winter lang.
Wous! mon, were we to cast away our meat
Wi' ilka moon, we'd soon hae nought to cat.
[Page 26]Fra side o' Tweed to Johnny Groats,
Ye wadna find a peck o' oats.
But here's sic wastefu' wark as ne'er was seen!
Ye cram your weams fra morning until e'en,
And gin ye canna lat it out,
Ye're than au fou o' bile and gout.
Not sae wi' us—we gang a moon and mare,
And yet our weams are neither sick nor sare.
My Lords, I dinna speak from partiality,
Nor any cause, my Lords, of nationality.
This Peter Pundar, ye may see,
Is nought to me nae mare than ye.
My Lords, I trow, ye ken full
[...]eel
I never countenanc'd the cheel,
Nor mean to do't for this ane thing,
The fallow does nae like his K—g,
Because he wadna buy his sang;
In that, I own, he's very wrang.
[Page 27]But as to this conspiracy,
I'll wager that it's au a lie.
I canna think that sic a deed
Could ever enter the loon's head.
But if it did, how could he do't?
My Lords, I canna mak that out.
Ye ken full weel, to Court he never gangs,
The kallon gets his bread by making sangs.
My Lords, his time's employ'd the leeve-lang day
To win baubees by lilting o' the lay.
As to your idle tales o' this and that,
Of accoucheur a Roi, and G— knows what,
My Lords, I wad believe as soon
[Ld. T—y giving Ld. Tweed-side a look of disapprobation.]
We're just now sitting i' the moon.
Hoot mon! don't luke at me sae surly,
And mak not au this hurly-burly
About a thing o' nought,
Till ye hae further sought.
[Page 28]Consider weel what ye're about,
Or else ye'll get us au turn'd out.
Troth mon, I did nae think ye sic a fule,
To bring us here to be the ridicule
Of folks o' ilka rank and station,
Bath high and low throughout the nation.
A ballad-maker stop up the K—g's weam!
O Lourd! O Lourd! we'll au be brought to shame.
My Lords, we munna shew our faces,
The folks will call us fules and asses.
And weel I wat some cheel will tak the hint,
And stick us au together in a print.
Yes, yes, my Lords, ye'll see your sels in etches,
Your Lawland lads are deev'lish quick at sketches.
Besides, that fallow Pundar ther ere lang
Will link us au into a bonny sang.
Troth, now I think on't, 'twad be better,
Before we rise, to tuck up Peter.
[Page 29]We soon could put
him out o' th' way,
And stop the lilting o' his lay.
The loss o' sic a loon wad nae be much—
I've got a bit o' inkle i' my pouch;
If auld friend T—y will but gie the beck,
We'll mak a noose, and put it round his neck,
And sae e'en lat him swing,
But dinna tell the K—g;
If he should speer for Peter, we may say
The loon brak out o' jail, and ran away:
And now, my noble Lords, what say ye au?
Wha votes for Highland execution law?
We'd find some hole about the C—l House
Where he wad lig as still as ony mouse.
I see ye laugh, my Lords, and weel ye may,
I dinna mean to hang the lad to-day;
I only meant a fling at T—y there,
For bringing us like April ninnies here.
[Page 30]Gude faith! I'd hae him luke about,
And see how he can get us out
O' sic a scrape as this—for should the K—g
Surprise us in't, 'twad be a serious thing.
He'd turn us out to seek our bread,
Wi' auld friend T—y at our head.
For wha wad keep sic fules about him?
Sic c—l's only fit for Gotham.
My Lords, I fear, I've tedious been,
And by friend T—y's lukes and ein,
He's in a deev'lish angry mood I find;
I dinna care for that—I'll speak my mind.
In points o' law, I readily allow,
To him we au mun doff our hats and bow;
On this side Tweed, I mean—but in a case
O' costive weam he talks just like an ass.
I see he does nae ken what he's about,
If he wad let me, I could help him out;
[Page 31]But this he winna do—he'll hae his way,
And, troth, I fear he'll lead us au astray—
—I see this silly bus'ness mun gang on.
Weel, weel, among sae many fules I am but one.
Now let's suppose this Frenchman's tale a fact,
I canna deem't a treasonable act;
For what's a moon? that could nae kill a K—g.
Did I not tell you, 'twas a common thing
For my North-British countrymen to gang
Twa moons or three?—And yet we are as strang
As ye are here—as free fra ails, save now and then
A little bit o' yuking outwardly i' th' skin.
As to that babbling Frenchman's silly chat
About a pension, or the like o' that,
The tale appears to me an arrant fiction,
And fraught wi' nonsense and wi' contradiction.
If pension was the object o' his game,
Ye ken, my Lords, he might hae that at hame.
[Page 32]But pension'd slave he winna be,
Nor sell his Wulks-and-Liberty
For au that K—gs and Courts can gie.
He does nae like their strait-lac'd ways,
Their proclamations, and their Sabbath-days.
Kirk-ganging orders mak him sick;
He likes to wag his feedle-stick,
And thinks it is the better way
To chase the muckle Deel away,
By playing Bobbing Joan, and sic like airs,
Than singing psalms at kirk, and saying pray'rs.
Lord Sidewind.
Here, by your leave, my Lord,
Let me put in a word.
Permit me to object,
That tho' he did reject
A handsome proffer'd pension
here,
Nathless the culprit might
elsewhere
Make hearty zealous application,
Mov'd both by int'rest and by inclination.
[Page 33]What tho' a
G—e has ever been his snarling,
Does this evince that
Louis is n't his darling?
I apprehend this was the very matter
Which prompted Peter to become a traitor;
For
Brunswick's line he bears a
crabb'd affection,
Because the House of
Bourbon is his predilection
Ld. Tweedside,
in reply.
Hoot, hoot, I canna think him sic a ninny,
To pouch a loui rather than a guinea,
And au for nought but love and itch o' treason:
Sic deed wad prove the fallow void o' reason,
A subject fit, in murky cell
Wi' Bedlamites for aye to dwell.
No, no, my Lords, say what ye will,
The kallon has some conscience still.
K—g G—e he says has bairns, and times are hard,
And for this cause he lately has declar'd
It gangs against his grain, and he's nae willing,
To tak fra him a single siller shilling.
[Page 34]Weel then, I argue thus
a fortiori—
Gude faith, 'twad be a strange unlikely story,
That, fond of Louis, as ye say he is,
He'd ask for siller at a time like this.
Hoot, hoot, ye ken full weel, my Lords, I trow,
The Grand Monarque's a broken-merchant now;
And to their sorrow, creditors have found
He canna pay a mark in ilka pound.
Is this a time to ask for pension,
Amang sic quarrel and dissension,
That Louis canna get a sous
To pay his tradesmen's bills, and keep his house?
But now, my Lords, I fear ye're weary grown
O' my long talk, and T—y 'gins to frown.
He seems to be in a most deev'lish passion,
As if he'd gie us Pundar's sang—D—n
Seize ye au.—Weel, now I've said my say,
And now my auld friend T—y fire away.
[Page 35]The colour glow'd in T—y's cheek,
Thrice he essay'd, but could not speak.
With blow of fist (so fierce his choler burn'd)
'Tis said, he split the C—l Board in twain.
At length, when wonted pow'rs of voice return'd,
He thus begun in high indignant strain.
Ld. T—y.
My Lords, I don't regard one single jot
Of all that sell from that
dry-bellied Scot.
Quick, rous'd at this, and fraught with ire,
His eye-balls flashing hostile fire,
Tweed-side retorted:—D—n your blude,
Gin I had not a mind as gude
For this illib'ral national reflaction
To make your life and saul pay satisfaction;
For au ye luke sae grim, and talk sae big,
I neither heed ye, nor your muckle wig.
Order! order! order! all!
Order echoed through the hall.
Lord Hopeful.
[Page 36]
O fie! O fie! my Lords, command your passion,
Or else our C—ls will disgrace the nation.
Rude language this, unmeet to fall
From members grave in C—l hall.
O, may this fray be never told;
O, may no tongue the tale unfold;
And yet, I speak it with great sorrow,
The tale will all be told to-morrow.
Perhaps ev'n now some patriot-spy
In corner snug is standing by,
To catch up ev'ry word that falls
Within the compass of these walls.
O, tell it not in Gath!
O, tell it not in Bath!
But sure it will be told afar,
And sure it will be publish'd near.
Then what will foreign nations say
When they're inform'd of this affray?
[Page 37]They'll say our C—l is all riot,
No better than a Polish diet.
O, glorious news for Sh—d—n and F—x!
O, welcome subject for their witty jokes!
How will they chuckle when they once find out
We make as much
fracas within as they
without!
But in one point they're wiser far than we;
Among themselves they very well agree.
My Lords, our measures only they oppose;
Disdain not to learn wisdom from your foes.
Ld. Courtly.
My Lords, I hope you'll one and all attend,
And mark the prudence of our premier-friend.
A forward youth he is, of wond'rous parts,
He charms our ears, and captivates our hearts:
Persuasion ever dwells upon his tongue
So very much,
I never think him wrong.
Endow'd with all his father's force and fire,
In wisdom grave the son excels the sire.
[Page 38]In years advanc'd thrice ten, or little more,
He boasts the cautious temper of three score.
My Lords, let
loss of place alarm our fears,
And bind us to this youth, who's wise above his years.
Ld. Make-peace.
My Lords, this prudent motion I for one
(In which, I trust, I shall not stand alone)
Most cordially approve:—And now, my Lords,
I'm up—I wish to utter a few words;
Happy, if any thing that falls from me
Should be the means to make us all agree.
Revolving this strange matter in my mind,
The only proper method I can find,
Is to call in two men of famous skill,
Well read in ev'ry book on costive ill.
The sons of Aesculapius best will know
How far a case like this may safely go.
My Lords, you'll own, this is a point that falls
Without the competency of these walls.
[Page 39]The question was no sooner mov'd,
Than by the Board
nem. con. approv'd.
Enter two Physicians.
Ld Category.
Well, doctors, you have heard the case, no doubt;
What are your thoughts upon it? Pray speak out.
Dr. Primus.
My Lord, I think the matter
Is possible in nature,
For any man or woman
(Tho' 'tis not very common)
In such-like case to go
For thirty days or so,
Secure from all alarms of dissolution,
Or any injury to constitution.
Ld. C—y.
Did ever case like this in all
Your practice and experience fall?
Dr. P.
I cannot say it did—
—Ld. C—y.
Then reason give
How costive patient in such case could live.
Dr. P.
[Page 40]
My Lord, in fault of such evacuation,
Our system operates by transpiration,
That is, my Lord, by porous exsudation.
Ld. C—y
to Dr. Secundus.
Now, Doctor, give us your advice.
Dr. Secundus.
I will, my Lord, and in a trice,
And partly with my friend I say—Content.
In other points I widely must dissent.
For in default of such evacuation,
I own my learned Brother's transpiration,
In plainer terms, his porous exsudation,
Might help Dame Nature for twelve days or so;
Further than this no mortal man can go.
The stoutest K—g that ever wore a crown
In half a month must lay his sceptre down.
Ld. C—y
to the Board.
My Lords, this case is harder than we thought,
And G—knows when to issue 'twill be brought.
What do you say? Our time should now be spent
In thinking of some new expedient.
Ld. Dinner-bell.
[Page 41]
My Lords, if my poor feeble voice be heard,
This puzzling point had better be deserr'd,
And to the learned corps in W—k-lane reserr'd.
Meanwhile, my Lords, we may go home and dine,
Recruit our spirits with a glass of wine,
May take a little private recreatiion,
And then resume this deep deliberation.
Done, done,
Nem. con.
Now, gentle reader, should some Lord invite thee,
Perhaps a sumptuous dinner may delight thee;
But if no lordly invitations come,
Then cat thy mutton-chop, and be content at home.
But if nor house nor home be thine,
Nor mutton-chop, nor silver coin,
Alas, thy case is very hard,
Thou'dst better change it with our Bard.
Peter lives well, and at free charge,
Until he's set once more at large;
[Page 42]And that, I think, must be ere long,
Unless Lord T—y, right or wrong,
To shew how far his pow'r can go
In wreaking vengeance on a foe,
Should grasp him in his arbitrary paw,
And give him
* Bishop Atterbury's law.
But if he does, this won't hang Peter,
Nor stop th' effusions of his metre.
'Tis true, such law would make him prance,
And send him cross the sea to France;
But T—y's utmost malice
No further goes than
Calais.
From thence our Bard may strait proceed,
And at Versailles its merits plead.
What tho' the plot did not succeed,
His will was ready for the deed.
Ev'n good intentions of this sort
Are well receiv'd at Bourbon's Court.
[Page 43]It ever was the Gallic nature
To hug a rebel and a traitor;
Whene'er they find a rogue in grain,
For future jobs his service they retain.
Here may our Bard snug refuge take,
As did ere while that Yankee snake,
Like Peter foster'd by his K—g
Till he shot forth his vengeful sting,
To wound the land which gave him bread,
And rais'd from earth his recreant head.
And if capricious Fortune should befriend him,
And old
Ben Franklin's wond'rous luck attend him,
Peter, high-honour'd by our Gallic foe,
May figure at Versailles a rebel Plenipo.
But now 'tis time our bus'ness should go on,
I wish these guzzling C—l Lords were done;
For sure they take a tedious while to dine—
—Oh! here they come well-flush'd with rosy wine;
[Page 44]Two-bottle men, I warrant you, or more;
Two did I say?—More likely three or four.
President of the Board.
Once more, my Lords, we're all in C—l met.
Let ev'ry noble member take his seat.
And now I hope you'll be good boys,
Refrain from quarrel and from noise;
Commit no outrage or disorder,
Or I must call you all to order.
Ld. T—y.
My Lord, you've spoken like a prudent man,
And keep us all to order,
if you can.
Ld. Category
Is there no message come from W—k lane?
Can't all the learned there this case explain?
Dr. Deputy.
My Lord, in due obedience to your high command,
Deputed from our learned body here I stand.
With long deliberation
On points of transpiration,
Or-porous exsudation,
Our minds are all in deep and dark confusion,
And cannot grope the way to fair conclusion.
[Page 45]My Lords, the members of our college
Do all with one consent acknowledge
The case is not within their knowledge.
The point suspended must remain,
Till France, and Italy, and Spain,
With ev'ry other learned nation,
Have penn'd a Latin dissertation.
When all our rays of science are collected,
We hope sufficient light will be reflected,
Some fair conclusion to make out,
And clear this point beyond all doubt.
Meantime, my Lords, you'll not forget
That we've receiv'd
no money yet.
You know, my Lords, with men of our description
The maxim is—no guinea, no prescription.
In this one case our brethren all agree,
That nothing must be done without a fee.
This wanting, not a word they'll write or speak,
But keep within their teeth their Latin and their Greek.
[Page 46]If then you'd know our whole collected sense,
You must not be too sparing of your pence.
Our name is Legion—we are many,
And ev'ry man must have his guinea.
—Down with a hundred thousand pounds or so—
We'll then begin, and see how far 'twill go.
Instant at name of hundred thousand pounds,
Lord Hopeful, starting from his seat, cry'd—Zounds!
This Peter Pindar plagues us more than Hastings,—
Amidst such lavish spendings, and such wastings,
My sinking fund will ne'er go on,
And then, my Lords, we're all undone;
For F—x and B—ke will pour forth fierce orations,
And drive us from our places and our stations.
Doctor, we give no answer now;
To-morrow you shall further know.
[Page 47]Dr. Deputy withdraws.
Ld. T—y
to the Board.
My Lords, we nothing further can discover;
This Peter Pindar's trial must—stand over.
When W—k-lane this puzzling question clears,
Or stronger evidence from France appears,
I'll send a proper summons to you all,
And hope you'll meet me here in C—l Hall,
Meanwhile, till we have fairly try'd him,
Pen, ink, and paper, shall not be denied him.
Peter.
Thank you, my Lord, I'll use your favour well,
And this, my next d—n ode shall tell.
C—l adjourns.
Peter, I see thy cause will tire them out.
Yes, yes, thou'lt get off now, I make no doubt.
But what avails this one escape?
Thou'lt soon be in another scrape.
For ah! my ill-starr'd rhyming brother,
Thou must be hang'd one day or other.
[Page 48]What say'st thou, Peter, to all this?
Peter.
Why, faith, I take it much amiss,
That thou'st stopp'd short of thy intention,
To sport thy Muse with my suspension.
Long while I've been in tip-toe expectation
To see how thou'dst perform the operation.
But this postponing is an artful scheme,
My penetrating eye perceives thy drist,
Thy Muse, unequal to the
lofty theme,
Would hide her nakedness with this poor shift.
Forgive me, if I do thee wrong
By rash conjecture of thy song.
I grant thou hast some little skill—
—I see that thou hast words at will
In common chat, and such-like humble sport—
Sermoni propiora—seems thy forte.
But where's thy
simile, and
phrase sublime?
For Fancy's flights, I fear, thou hast no rhyme.
[Page 49]No;—loftiness of song is not for thee,
But Homer, Virgil, Milton, and for ME.
And now my hand is fairly in,
I'll shew thee how thou must begin,
If thou would'st boldly soar in epic line,
And rival Homer's lofty song or mine.
Now cock thine eye,
And see me fly.
"Of T—y's direful wig, of vengeful laws,
"Of plot and costive K—g, the tragic cause
"Which launch'd from Tyburn-tree to Pluto's reign
"The soul of tuneful Bard untimely slain,
"Sing heav'nly Muse, &c."—Thus must thy numbers flow
To hurl a lofty Bard to shades below;
And always end thy song with brilliant dash,
Which Frenchmen call
eclat, and Englishmen call
flash.
Observe my lessons well, and by and by
Thy feeble unfledg'd Muse may learn to fly.
[Page 50]Now, Peter Pindar, without joking,
Thou'rt grown so saucy and provoking,
Thou'lt rouse my chol'ric indignation
To give thee such a flagellation
As thou hadst never yet,
And wilt not soon forget.
Then take this little sample of my skill,
And own I've
similes, as well as
words, at will.
1. Fox and Grapes Simile.
As Fox which eyes the ripen'd grapes,
And knows no fruit is sweeter,
But if he
can't, won't have those grapes;
So'rt thou, O Reynard Peter.
2. The disappointed Swain Simile.
As Swain who woos a pretty maid,
And fain at church would meet her;
But ah! whose rival
wins that maid;
So'rt thou, green-willow Peter.
3. The Old Maid Simile.
As ancient Maid who will not wed,
If suitors won't entreat her,
And sorely rails at marriage-bed;
So'rt thou, forsaken Peter.
4. Grub-street Bard Simile.
As vilest Bard who mocks his K—g
In motley dogg'rel metre,
Still disregarded by his K—g;
So'rt thou, O Grub-street Peter.
5. Pindar and his Muse,
like to like,
As is thy darling and prolific Muse
Of easy virtue, and unblushing face;
So'rt thou (forgive me if I wrong accuse)
Devoid of honour, loyalty, or grace.
Peter.
[Page 52]
What? touch my honour! rather strike me dead.—
—My dearest rhyming Brother Peter,
So well I love thee and thy metre,
I would not touch a hair upon thy head.
With such a pleasant and facetious fellow
I'd sooner drink a bottle, and be mellow.
My dearest Bard, with thee O may I swing,
If I don't love thee, as thou lov'st thy K—g.
But as to honour, Peter, say no more,
Repeat no grievance, aggravate no sore.
Peter.
Honour I had—
—
Yes, yes, no doubt, no doubt,
But usage hard has worn thy honour out.
But 'tis no loss, for what canst thou
With this same honour have to do?
It never sold thy bolus or thy pill,
It never paid thy printer K—y's bill.
If then thy honour brings no profit,
What good to thee can e'er come of it?
[Page 53]Thy brother wit, Jack Falstaff, us'd to say
That of such useless bauble he'd have none,
Which could not keep him out of danger's way,
Nor heal a wound, nor set a broken bone.
Of Falstaff's prudence I produce this sample,
For Peter Pindar's lesson and example;
For, sure, you are congenial souls
As ever met o'er flowing bowls,
Or e'er carous'd with giddy heir apparent,
Or made disloyal jest of r—l parent.
O, had I Shakespeare's deathless lyre,
O, would his Muse my verse inspire,
Thy name, O Peter, still should float along
The stream of Time in
never-drowning song;
And whilst the years in long succession roll,
Still
Jack and
Peter should swim cheek by jowl.
—But now of flourishing enough.
Let's find the thread where we broke off.
[Page 54]My Muse forgets—O fie upon her!—
—But now I recollect—'twas honour.
Of this I tell thee once again,
That honour's loss will be thy gain.
This honour would not let thee sing,
Nor mock and ridicule thy K—g.
Such loyal monitor would strike thee dumb,
And poet
Pindar turn to poet
mum;
And this would be thy certain ruin,
Thy woeful starving and undoing.
—But this is only wasting precious time—
I'm now to give thee simile
sublime.
The Gibbet Simile.
As when some rogue's on lofty gibbet hung,
Some rogue as impudent as ever swung,
His ghastly corpse all dangling in the air,
Retaining ev'n in death a dire King-killing air.
[Page 55]Sure, Peter, this must freeze thy very blood;
Thou'rt very bad if this won't make thee good.
But since thou'rt so ambitious and presumptuous grown,
I'll hoist thee higher still—but then I'll fetch thee down.
But be n't afraid, 'tis all in sport,
And thou'lt receive but little hurt.
Nay, in this game thou'lt be the only winner,
For thou, not I, wilt carry off the dinner.
The Kite Simile.
As when some C-ts-w-d Kite ascends on high,
Waves in the wind, or sails along the sky,
If prey's in view, and hunger presses hard,
Slap down he comes to snatch a chick from poultry yard.
Now, Peter, thou hast stol'n that chicken,
'Twill serve thee for a little picking.
I guess that thou'rt a greedy elf,
Thou'lt eat it ev'ry bit thyself.
[Page 56]Perchance to K—y thou wouldst help a wing,
But deuce a bit to me, or ev'n to G—e thy K—g.
Peter, I like not shooting in the dark,
Because not one in three may hit thy mark.
Give me that open day-light rebel poet
Who tells his name, nor cares if all men know it.
But thou behind this Pindar's mask art snug
As biting vermin latent close in rug,
By Gods unnam'd, by British men clep'd—bug.
Yes; this bush-fight
Is thy delight.
How oft like coward savage hast thou laid
In dark and silent nightly ambuscade,
Thy spiteful feather'd shaft to wing
And wound the heart of G—e thy K—g,
A K—g who never injur'd thee,
But very much offended me,
[Page 57]By such disuse of r—l shears,
And such neglect of Peter Pindar's ears.
Such cowardly attack
I never will forgive;
I'll point thee out a black
As long as e'er I live.
I've more to add—which further still will grate;
For tho' thou art a witty fellow,
With thee I never will be mellow:
Assassins ever were my mortal hate.
Yes; now more seriously I come to think,
I must recall my former hasty motion;
If e'er with rebel rogues like thee I drink,
May baneful juice of hemlock be my potion.
Moreover, Peter; if the Fates decree
That judgment must o'ertake both thee and me
For this our crime
Of wicked rhyme;
[Page 58]If thou and I must both be shipp'd away,
To found new families at Bot'ny Bay;
Before such foreign trip I take,
This first inquiry will I make,
What passengers are going?
And if I find that thou art there,
I'll cry, rash mariner! forbear,
Nor be thy own undoing.
If life, or ship, or cargo, thy regard,
For once O take a convict's word;
From steerage drag that wicked, wicked Bard,
And toss him headlong over-board.
Now, reader, faith my Muse is at stand
What further sport to give thee on the land;
And so to end the matter,
I'll dash him in the water.
And here I've
such a simile to treat with,
As every day, I'm sure, thou wilt not meet with;
[Page 59]Thou'lt swear that even Pindar Peter
Ne'er made a longer or a better.
I'll launch him off in
majestoso,
Because 'tis fit that he should go so.
As when some convict cleaves the wat'ry way:
Condemn'd to colonize at Bot'ny Bay;
The bark unequal to the sinful freight,
Her timbers groan beneath the pressive weight.
Lo! how the welkin low'rs! what clouds arise!
See! angry Neptune mounts into the skies.
On ev'ry side tremendous billows roar,
Old Ocean's rous'd, and foams from shore to shore.
See! lightnings flash; hark! dreadful thunders roll,
And rend the black'ning sky from pole to pole.
The trembling pilot quits the helm, and leaves
His bark the sport of raging winds and waves.
Hark! what shrieks and dismal skies,
Hark! what crashing,
Hark! what slashing,
[Page 60]Hark! what bumping,
Hark! what thumping,
Rumbling, jumbling,
Fumbling, tumbling,
Cursing, swearing,
Ripping, tearing,
Shouting, bawling,
Main-mast falling,
Planks all starting,
Decks all parting,
Friends lamenting,
Foes relenting,
Ranting, raving,
Mercy craving,
Peter trembling,
Not dissembling,
Pindar quaking
For ode-making,
[Page 61]Vessel rocking, found'ring, sinking,
Sailors wicked and unthinking,
(Ah! not lov'd grog, but briny water drinking)
Drowning, and blasting one another's eyes.
* There!—down she goes with Peter Pindar in her:
This 'tis to have on board a grievous sinner.
—But lo! who's he that floats upon the main?
By Jupiter, 'tis Peter
up again.
Do all I can to keep him down,
This buoyant fellow will not drown.
I see our poet's tuneful breath
Will not be stopp'd by
wat'ry death.
But now again I'm at a stand
How I shall get him back to land.
O, would some vessel but appear in view,
Or passing to the old world or the new.—
[Page 62]—Huzza!—a dolphin, charm'd by Peter's song,
Bestrid by Peter, nimbly glides along.
Alternate
up and
down he steers his course,
Like Master Tommy riding hobby-horse.
Say, Peter, didst thou ever ride so prettily before?
Cheer up, my boy:—Thou'lt soon behold thy native shore.
Kind dolphin, speed thy way to Plymouth Sound,
And land thy poet sasc on Cornish ground,
Rejoice, O friends of Peter and of ode,
You'll see him soon: he's posting on the road.
Escap'd from perils both of land and main,
Your Bard is turn'd upon your hands again.
FINIS