Of Tea and Water-drinking ways,
In proper time and place;
Of sober draughts, so clear and cool,
Dipp’d out of a transparent pool
Reflecting heaven’s face.
And streams as gushes from the hills,
It’s wery well to talk;—
But what becomes of all sich schemes,
With ponds of ice, and running streams
As doesn’t even walk?
A PUBLIC DINNER.
A DAY’S SPORT ON THE MOORS.
And all the rivers, new or old,
Is frozen far and wide;
And limpid springs is solid stuff,
And crystal pools is hard enough
To skate upon and slide;—
But drink of ale, and porter too,
Champagne as makes a fizz;
Port, sherry, or the Rhenish sort,
And p’rhaps a drop of summut short—
The water-pipes is friz!
THE FORLORN SHEPHERD’S COMPLAINT.
AN UNPUBLISHED POEM, FROM SYDNEY.
A-keeping Company with them dumb Brutes,
Old Park vos no bad Judge—confound his vig!
Of vot vood break the Sperrit of a Prig!
To go a-tagging arter Vethers’ Tails
And valk in Herbage as delights the Flock,
But stinks of Sweet Herbs vorser nor the Dock!
To Von whose Vork vos alvay in a Mob!
It’s out of all our Lines, for sure I am
Jack Shepherd even never kep a Lamb!
To think of Seven Years of keepin Sheep,
The spooniest Beasts in Nater, all to Sticks,
And not a Votch to take for all their Ticks!
To only Baa! and Botanize about,
I’d quite as leaf have had the t’other Pool,
And come to Cotton as to all this Vool!
Since here I come to be a Farmer’s Cad,
And then I cotch’d a vild Beast in a Snooze,
And pick’d her Pouch of three young Kangaroos!
Or show a sneaking Kindness for a Till;
And as for Vashings, on a hedge to dry,
I’d put the Natives’ Linen in my Eye!
And find a fence to turn it into Swag,
I’d give it all in Lonnon Streets to stand,
And if I had my pick, I’d say the Strand!
To my old crib to meet with Jack, and Sal,
I’ve been so gallows honest in this Place,
I shan’t not like to show my sheepish Face.
Of Irish Blackguard to be keepin’ Flocks,
‘Mong naked Blacks, sich Savages to hus,
They’ve nayther got a Poker nor a Pus.
To dumb brute Beasts,—and so I’ll cut my Stick!
And vot’s the Use a Feller’s Eyes to pipe
Vere von can’t borrow any Gemman’s Vipe?’
HUGGINS AND DUGGINS.
A PASTORAL AFTER POPE.
While keeping flocks on Salisbury Plains,
For all that tend on sheep as drovers,
Are turned to songsters, or to lovers,
Each of the lass he called his dear,
Began to carol loud and clear.
In the way of ancient shepherd men;
Who thus alternate hitch’d in song,
“All things by turns, and nothing long.”
HUGGINS.
There’s one beats all in form and face,
Search through all Great and Little Bumpstead,
You’ll only find one Peggy Plumpstead.
DUGGINS.
I make the cliffs repeat her name:
When I’m inspired by gills and noggins,
The rocks re-echo Sally Hoggins!
HUGGINS.
I think of Peggy as I rove.
I’d carve her name on every tree,
But I don’t know my A, B, C.
DUGGINS.
I think of nothing else but Sally.
I’d sing her praise, but I can sing
No song, except “God save the King.”
HUGGINS.
And all confess she bears the bell,—
Where’er she goes swains flock together,
Like sheep that follow the bellwether.
DUGGINS.
HUGGINS.
I often wish my lot was hisn;
How often I should stand and turn,
To get a pat from hands like hern.
DUGGINS.
To stand about and stare at she;
But when I look, she turns and shies,
And won’t bear none but their sheep’s-eyes?
HUGGINS.
Beneath her smile the garden grows;
Potatoes spring, and cabbage starts,
’Tatoes have eyes, and cabbage hearts!
HUGGINS.
Her presence brightens every thing;
The sun smiles bright, but where her grin is,
It makes brass farthings look like guineas.
HUGGINS.
She’s sometimes kind, and sometimes coy,
And keeps me, by her wayward tricks,
As comfortless as sheep with ticks.
DUGGINS.
And yet as cold as Christmas day;
For when she’s asked to change her lot,
Lamb’s wool,—but Sally, she wool not.
SEE-VIEW—BROAD STAIRS.
THE ISLE OF MAN.
HUGGINS.
I’d never wish for state or wealth;
Talking of having health and more pence,
I’d drink her health if I had fourpence.
DUGGINS.
If Sally’s banns were read with mine;
She cries, when such a wish I carry,
“Marry come up!” but will not marry.
PAIN IN A PLEASURE-BOAT.
A SEA ECLOCUE.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Lord, there’s a wave! it’s coming in! and roaring like a bull!
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Steady your helm! we’ll clear the Pint! lay right for yonder pink!
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
I wonder what it is, now, but—I never felt so queer!
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
We shall have to beat about a bit,—Bill, keep her out to sea.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
Boatman.
Mrs. F.
GOG AND MAGOG.
A GUILDHALL DUET.
MAGOG.
And yet no dinner carved;
Shall we endure this sort of fun,
And stand here to be starved?
GOG.
Must be a shabby set;
I’ve stood here since King Charles’s time,
And had no dinner yet!
MAGOG.
I say, are we to dine to-day?
GOG.
I’ve waited till I’m sick and faint;
I’ll tell you what, they’ll starve us both,
I’ll tell you what, they’ll stop our growth.
MAGOG.
My hungry tooth to charm;
I’ve wind enough in my inside
To play the Hundredth Psalm.
GOG.
Without the least remorse;
This very week I saw the Mayor
A feeding like a horse!
MAGOG.
GOG.
That they should keep a giant short!
They’ll stop our growth, they’ll stop our growth;
They’ll starve us both, they’ll starve us both!
MAGOG.
That we should dine at One;
Why, Gog, I say, our meat by this
Is rather over-done.
GOG.
So hungry is my maw,
Give me an Alderman in chains,
And I will eat him raw!
MAGOG.
And yet they never think of us.
I say, are we to dine to-day;
Are we to dine to-day?
GOG.
So mealy-mouthed without a meal!
MAGOG.
GOG.
BOTH.
THE SWEEP’S COMPLAINT.
“I like to meet a sweep—such as come forth with the dawn, or somewhat earlier, with their little professional notes, sounding like the peep, peep of a young sparrow.”—Essays of Elia.
Macbeth hath murdered sweep.”—Shakspeare.
I rose, about the seventh chime,
When little stunted boys that climb
Still linger in the street:
And as I walked, I saw indeed
A sample of the sooty breed,
Though he was rather run to seed,
In height about five feet.
A mongrel tint he seem’d to take,
Poetic simile to make,
Day through his Martin ‘gan to break,
Quite overcoming jet.
From side to side he cross’d oblique,
Like Frenchman who has friends to seek,
And yet no English word can speak,
He walk’d upon the fret:
And while he sought the dingy job,
His lab’ring breast appear’d to throb
And half a hiccup half a sob
Betray’d internal woe.
To cry the cry he had by rote
He yearn’d, but law forbade the note,
Like Chanticleer with roupy throat,
He gaped—but not a crow!
I watch’d him, and the glimpse I snatch’d
Disclosed his sorry eyelids patch’d
With red, as if the soot had catch’d
That hung about the lid;
And soon I saw the tear-drop stray,
He did not care to brush away;
Thought I the cause he will betray—
And thus at last he did.
But I’m bound the members as silenced us, in doing it had plenty of magging.
They had better send us all off, they had, to the School for the Deaf and Dumb,
To unlarn us our mother tongues, and to make signs and be regularly mum.
But they can’t undo natur—as sure as ever the morning begins to peep,
Directly I open my eyes, I can’t help calling out Sweep
As natural as the sparrows among the chimbley-pots that say Cheep!
For my own part I find my suppress’d voice very uneasy,
And comparable to nothing but having your tissue stopt when you are sneezy.
Well, it’s all up with us! tho’ I suppose we mustn’t cry all up.
Here’s a precious merry Christmas, I’m blest if I can earn either bit or sup!
If crying Sweep, of mornings, is going beyond quietness’s border,
Them as pretends to be fond of silence oughtn’t to cry hear, hear, and order, order.
I wonder Mr. Sutton, as we’ve sut-on too, don’t sympathise with us
As a Speaker what don’t speak, and that’s exactly our own cus.
God help us if we don’t not cry, how are we to pursue our callings?
I’m sure we’re not half so bad as other businesses with their bawlings.
For instance, the general postmen, that at six o’clock go about ringing,
And wake up all the babbies that their mothers have just got to sleep with singing.
Greens oughtn’t to be cried no more than blacks—to do the unpartial job,
If they bring in a Sooty Bill, they ought to have brought in a Dusty Bob.
Is a dustman’s voice more sweet than ourn, when he comes a seeking arter the cinders,
Instead of a little boy like a blackbird in spring, singing merrily under your windows?
There’s the omnibus cads as plies in Cheapside, and keeps calling out Bank and City;
Let his Worship, the Mayor, decide if our call of Sweep is not just as pretty.
I can’t see why the Jews should be let go about crying Old Close thro’ their hooky noses,
And Christian laws should be ten times more hard than the old stone laws of Moses.
Why isn’t the mouths of the muffin-men compell’d to be equally shut?
Why, because Parliament members eat muffins, but they never eat no sut.
Next year there won’t be any May-day at all, we shan’t have no heart to dance,
And Jack in the Green will go in black like mourning for our mischance;
If we live as long as May, that’s to say, through the hard winter and pinching weather,
For I don’t see how we’re to earn enough to keep body and soul together.
I only wish Mr. Wilberforce or some of them that pities the niggers,
Would take a peep down in our cellars, and look at our miserable starving figures,
A-sitting idle on our empty sacks, and all ready to eat each other,
And a brood of little ones crying for bread to a heart-breaking Father and Mother.
They haven’t a rag of clothes to mend, if their mothers had thread and needles,
But crawl naked about the cellars, poor things, like a swarm of common black beadles.
If they’d only inquired before passing the Act and taken a few such peeps,
I don’t think that any real gentleman would have set his face against sweeps.
Climbin’s an ancient respectable art, and if History’s of any vally,
Was recommended by Queen Elizabeth to the great Sir Walter Raleigh,
When he wrote on a pane of glass how I’d climb, if the way I only knew,
And she writ beneath, if your heart’s afeard, don’t venture up the flue.
As for me I was always loyal, and respected all powers that are higher,
But how can I now say God save the King, if I an’t to be a Cryer?
There’s London milk, that’s one of the cries, even on Sunday the law allows,
But ought black sweeps, that are human beasts, to be worser off than black cows?
Do we go calling about, when it’s church time, like the noisy Billingsgate vermin,
And disturb the parson with “All alive O!” in the middle of a funeral sermon?
But the fish won’t keep, not the mackarel won’t, is the cry of the Parliament elves,
Every thing, except the sweeps I think, is to be allowed to keep themselves!
Lord help us! what’s to become of us if we mustn’t cry no more?
We shan’t do for black mutes to go a standing at a death’s door.
And we shan’t do to emigrate, no not even to the Hottentot nations,
For as time wears on, our black will wear off, and then think of our situations!
And we should not do, in lieu of black-a-moor footmen, to serve ladies of quality nimbly,
For when we’re drest in our sky-blue and silver, and large frills, all
clean and neat, and white silk stockings, if they pleased to
desire us to sweep the hearth, we couldn’t resist the chimbley.
THE CARELESSE NURSE MAYD.
Beguiled by Wooer fayne and fond;
And whiles His flatterynge Vowes She drank,
Her Nurselynge slipt within a Pond!
For She was fayre and He was Kinde;
The Sunne went down before She wist
Another Sonne had sett behinde!
That deemed Her owne the Urchine’s Sinne,
She pluckt Him out, but he was nowe
Past being whipt for fallynge in.
With Shrikes that Echo answerde round—
O! foolishe Mayd to be soe sadde
The Momente that her Care was drownd!
JARVIS AND MRS. COPE.
A DECIDEDLY SERIOUS BALLAD.
There lived one Mrs. Cope;
A pious woman she was call’d,
As Pius as a Pope.
But chatt’ring like a bird
Of sin and grace—in such a case
Mag-piety’s the word.
This day a text will broach,
And much I long to hear him preach,
So, Betty, call a coach.”
Ere they began to jog—
“Now, Coachman, what d’ye take me for?”
Says Coachman, “for a hog.”
A second hog did lack—
Whereas she only offered him
One shilling and “a track.”
You and your tracks be both—”
“ACCUSTOMED TO THE CARE OF CHILDREN.”
THE BOX SEAT.
Her shilling with an oath.
And soon it shall be done,
I’ll have you up at Worship Street,
You wicked one, naught one!”
That Friday week they stood;
She said bad language he had used,
And thus she “made it good.”
And wouldn’t take no less—
I said one shilling was enough,—
And he said C—U—S!
He swore again at them,
I said he was a wicked man,
And he said D—A—M.”
So he stroked down his hair,
“All what she says is false—cause why?
I’ll swear I never swear!
Can tell you what I am;
I’m one of seven children, all
Brought up without a Dam!
Since ever I were nust,
If ever I said C—U—S,
I wish I may be cust!
And raining all the while,
To go to New Jerusalem,
A wery long two mile.
She rows me in the street,
And uses words as is not fit
For coachmen to repeat!
You sinner! I know well,—
Your worship, it’s the P—I—T
Of E and double L;”
Said he—I’ll fine you both!
And of the two—why Mrs. Cope’s
I think the biggest oath?”
A LAY OF REAL LIFE.
“Some are born with a wooden spoon in their mouths, and some with a golden ladle.”—Goldsmith.
“Some are born with tin rings in their noses, and some with silver ones.”—Silversmith.
Sold every acre, grass or corn,
And left the next heir all forlorn?
My Grandfather.
And physicked me and made me worse,
Till infancy became a curse?
My Grandfather.
A comfort to my mother dear,
And Mr. Pope, the overseer?
My Father.
Till all my bones came through my skin,
Then called me “ugly little sin?”
My Mother.
And took me home—and made me work,
But managed half my meals to shirk?
My Aunt.
“He hated other’s brats the most,”
And therefore made me feel my post?
My Uncle.
And always laid them at my door,
Till many a bitter bang I bore?
My Cousin.
Again with father to reside,
Black shoes, clean knives, run far and wide?
My Stepmother.
And when I played cried “What a noise!—
Girls always hector over boys—
My Sister.
Or took it all, did he incline,
‘Cause I was eight, and he was nine?
My Brother.
And gave me sixpence, “all he had;”
But at the stall the coin was bad?
My Godfather.
But when misfortune came to pass,
Referr’d me to the pump? Alas!
My Friend.
THE LARK AND THE ROOK.
A FABLE.
“Lo! hear the gentle lark!”—Shakespeare.