| |
| MUCH malice mingld with a little wit | |
| Perhaps may censure this mysterious writ: | |
| Because the Muse has peopld Caledon | |
| With Panthers, Bears and Wolves, and beasts unknown, | |
| As if we were not stockd with monsters of our own. | 5 |
| Let Æsop answer, who has set to view, | |
| Such kinds as Greece and Phrygia never knew; | |
| And mother Hubbard in her homely dress | |
| Has sharply blamd a British Lioness, | |
| That Queen, whose feast the factious rabble keep, | 10 |
| Exposd obscenely naked and a-sleep. | |
| Led by those great examples, may not I | |
| The wanted organs of their words supply? | |
| If men transact like brutes, tis equal then | |
| For brutes to claim the privilege of men. | 15 |
| Others our Hind of folly will endite, | |
| To entertain a dangrous guest by night. | |
| Let those remember, that she cannot dye | |
| Till rolling time is lost in round eternity; | |
| Nor need she fear the Panther, though untamd, | 20 |
| Because the Lyons peace was now proclaimd; | |
| The wary salvage would not give offence, | |
| To forfeit the protection of her Prince; | |
| But watchd the time her vengeance to compleat, | |
| When all her furry sons in frequent Senate met. | 25 |
| Mean while she quenchd her fury at the floud | |
| And with a Lenten sallad coold her bloud. | |
| Their commons, though but course, were nothing scant, | |
| Nor did their minds an equal banquet want. | |
| For now the Hind, whose noble nature strove | 30 |
| T express her plain simplicity of love, | |
| Did all the honours of her house so well, | |
| No sharp debates disturbd the friendly meal. | |
| She turnd the talk, avoiding that extreme, | |
| To common dangers past, a sadly pleasing theam; | 35 |
| Remembering evry storm which tossd the state, | |
| When both were objects of the publick hate, | |
| And dropd a tear betwixt for her own childrens fate. | |
| Nor faild she then a full review to make | |
| Of what the Panther sufferd for her sake. | 40 |
| Her lost esteem, her truth, her loyal care, | |
| Her faith unshaken to an exild Heir, | |
| Her strength t endure, her courage to defy, | |
| Her choice of honourable infamy. | |
| On these prolixly thankfull, she enlargd, | 45 |
| Then with acknowledgments her self she chargd: | |
| For friendship of it self, an holy tye, | |
| Is made more sacred by adversity. | |
| Now should they part, malicious tongues woud say, | |
| They met like chance companions on the way, | 50 |
| Whom mutual fear of robbers had possessd; | |
| While danger lasted, kindness was professd; | |
| But that once oer, the short-livd union ends, | |
| The road divides, and there divide the friends. | |
| The Panther nodded when her speech was done, | 55 |
| And thanked her coldly in a hollow tone. | |
| But said, her gratitude had gone too far | |
| For common offices of Christian care. | |
| If to the lawfull Heir she had been true, | |
| She paid but Cæsar what was Cæsars due. | 60 |
| I might, she added, with like praise describe | |
| Your suffring sons, and so return your bribe; | |
| But incense from my hands is poorly prizd, | |
| For gifts are scornd where givers are despisd. | |
| I servd a turn, and then was cast away; | 65 |
| You, like the gawdy fly, your wings display, | |
| And sip the sweets, and bask in your Great Patrons day. | |
| This heard, the Matron was not slow to find | |
| What sort of malady had seizd her mind: | |
| Disdain, with gnawing envy, fell despight, | 70 |
| And cankerd malice stood in open sight: | |
| Ambition, intrest, pride without controul, | |
| And jealousie, the jaundice of the soul; | |
| Revenge, the bloudy minister of ill, | |
| With all the lean tormenters of the will. | 75 |
| Twas easie now to guess from whence arose | |
| Her new made union with her ancient foes. | |
| Her forcd civilities, her faint embrace, | |
| Affected kindness with an alterd face: | |
| Yet durst she not too deeply probe the wound, | 80 |
| As hoping still the nobler parts were sound; | |
| But strove with Anodynes t asswage the smart, | |
| And mildly thus her medcine did impart. | |
| Complaints of Lovers help to ease their pain; | |
| It shows a Rest of kindness to complain, | 85 |
| A friendship loth to quit its former hold, | |
| And conscious merit may be justly bold. | |
| But much more just your jealousie would show, | |
| If others good were injury to you: | |
| Witness ye heavns how I rejoice to see | 90 |
| Rewarded worth, and rising loyalty. | |
| Your Warrior Offspring that upheld the crown, | |
| The scarlet honours of your peacefull gown, | |
| Are the most pleasing objects I can find, | |
| Charms to my sight, and cordials to my mind: | 95 |
| When vertue spooms before a prosperous gale, | |
| My heaving wishes help to fill the sail; | |
| And if my prayrs for all the brave were heard, | |
| Cæsar should still have such, and such should still reward. | |
| The labourd earth your pains have sowd and tilld: | 100 |
| Tis just you reap the product of the field. | |
| Yours be the harvest, tis the beggars gain | |
| To glean the fallings of the loaded wain. | |
| Such scatterd ears as are not worth your care, | |
| Your charity for alms may safely spare, | 105 |
| And alms are but the vehicles of prayr. | |
| My daily bread is littrally implord, | |
| I have no barns nor granaries to hoard; | |
| If Cæsar to his own his hand extends, | |
| Say which of yours his charity offends: | 110 |
| You know, he largely gives, to more than are his friends. | |
| Are you defrauded when he feeds the poor? | |
| Our mite decreases nothing of your store; | |
| I am but few, and by your fare you see | |
| My crying sins are not of luxury. | 115 |
| Some juster motive sure your mind withdraws, | |
| And makes you break our friendships holy laws, | |
| For barefacd envy is too base a cause. | |
| Show more occasion for your discontent; | |
| Your love, the Wolf, woud help you to invent. | 120 |
| Some German quarrel, or, as times go now, | |
| Some French, where force is uppermost, will doe. | |
| When at the fountains head, as merit ought | |
| To claim the place, you take a swilling draught, | |
| How easie tis an envious eye to throw | 125 |
| And tax the sheep for troubling streams below; | |
| Or call her, (when no farther cause you find,) | |
| An enemy professd of all your kind! | |
| But then, perhaps, the wicked world woud think | |
| The Wolf designd to eat as well as drink. | 130 |
| This last allusion gauld the Panther more, | |
| Because indeed it rubbd upon the sore. | |
| Yet seemd she not to winch, though shrewdly paind: | |
| But thus her Passive character maintaind. | |
| I never grudgd, whateer my foes report, | 135 |
| Your flaunting fortune in the Lyons court. | |
| You have your day, or you are much belyd, | |
| But I am always on the suffring side: | |
| You know my doctrine, and I need not say | |
| I will not, but I cannot disobey. | 140 |
| On this firm principle I ever stood: | |
| He of my sons who fails to make it good, | |
| By one rebellious act renounces to my bloud. | |
| Ah, said the Hind, how many sons have you | |
| Who call you mother, whom you never knew! | 145 |
| But most of them who that relation plead | |
| Are such ungratious youths as wish you dead. | |
| They gape at rich revenues which you hold | |
| And fain would nible at your grandame gold | |
| Enquire into your years, and laugh to find; | 150 |
| Your crazy temper shows you much declind. | |
| Were you not dim, and doted, you might see | |
| A pack of cheats that claim a pedigree, | |
| No more of kin to you, than you to me. | |
| Do you not know that for a little coin | 155 |
| Heralds can foist a name into the line? | |
| They ask you blessing but for what you have, | |
| But once possessd of what with care you save, | |
| The wanton boyes woud piss upon your grave. | |
| Your sons of Latitude that court your grace, | 160 |
| Though most resembling you in form and face, | |
| Are far the worst of your pretended race. | |
| And, but I blush your honesty to blot: | |
| Pray God you prove em lawfully begot: | |
| For, in some Popish libells I have read, | 165 |
| The Wolf has been too busie in your bed; | |
| At least their hinder parts, the belly-piece, | |
| The paunch, and all that Scorpio claims are his. | |
| Their malice too a sore suspicion brings; | |
| For though they dare not bark, they snarl at kings; | 170 |
| Nor blame em for intruding in your line, | |
| Fat Bishopricks are still of right divine. | |
| Think you your new French Proselytes are come | |
| To starve abroad, because they starvd at home? | |
| Your benefices twinckld from afar, | 175 |
| They found the new Messiah by the star: | |
| Those Swisses fight on any side for pay, | |
| And tis the living that conforms, not they. | |
| Mark with what management their tribes divide, | |
| Some stick to you, and some to t other side | 180 |
| That many churches may for many mouths provide. | |
| More vacant pulpits woud more converts make; | |
| All woud have Latitude enough to take; | |
| The rest unbeneficd, your sects maintain | |
| For ordinations without cures are vain, | 185 |
| And chamber practice is a silent gain. | |
| Your sons of breadth at home, are much like these, | |
| Their soft and yielding metals run with ease; | |
| They melt, and take the figure of the mould: | |
| But harden, and preserve it best in gold. | 190 |
| Your Delphick sword, the Panther then replyd, | |
| Is double-edgd, and cuts on either side. | |
| Some sons of mine, who bear upon their shield, | |
| Three steeples Argent in a sable field, | |
| Have sharply taxd your converts, who unfed | 195 |
| Have followd you for miracles of bread; | |
| Such who themselves of no religion are, | |
| Allurd with gain, for any will declare. | |
| Bare lyes with bold assertions they can face, | |
| But dint of argument is out of place. | 200 |
| The grim Logician puts em in a fright, | |
| Tis easier far to flourish than to fight. | |
| Thus, our eighth Henrys marriage they defame; | |
| They say the schism of beds began the game, | |
| Divorcing from the Church to wed the Dame. | 205 |
| Though largely provd, and by himself professd | |
| That conscience, conscience would not let him rest: | |
| I mean, not till possessd of her he lovd, | |
| And old, uncharming Catherine was removd. | |
| For sundry years before did he complain, | 210 |
| And told his ghostly Confessour his pain. | |
| With the same impudence, without a ground, | |
| They say, that look the reformation round, | |
| No Treatise of Humility is found. | |
| But if none were, the Gospel does not want, | 215 |
| Our Saviour preachd it, and I hope you grant, | |
| The Sermon in the mount was Protestant: | |
| No doubt, replyd the Hind, as sure as all | |
| The writings of Saint Peter and Saint Paul. | |
| On that decision let it stand or fall. | 220 |
| Now for my converts, who you say unfed | |
| Have followd me for miracles of bread. | |
| Judge not by hear-say, but observe at least, | |
| If since their change, their loaves have been increast. | |
| The Lyon buyes no Converts, if he did, | 225 |
| Beasts woud be sold as fast as he coud bid. | |
| Tax those of intrest who conform for gain, | |
| Or stay the market of another reign. | |
| Your broad-way sons woud never be too nice | |
| To close with Calvin, if he paid their price; | 230 |
| But, raisd three steeples highr, woud change their note, | |
| And quit the Cassock for the Canting-coat. | |
| Now, if you damn this censure, as too bold, | |
| Judge by your selves, and think not others sold. | |
| Mean-time my sons accusd, by fames report | 235 |
| Pay small attendance at the Lyons court, | |
| Nor rise with early crowds, nor flatter late, | |
| (For silently they beg who daily wait.) | |
| Preferment is bestowd that comes unsought, | |
| Attendance is a bribe, and then tis bought. | 240 |
| How they shoud speed, their fortune is untryd, | |
| For not to ask, is not to be denied. | |
| For what they have their God and King they bless, | |
| And hope they shoud not murmur, had they less. | |
| But if reducd subsistence to implore, | 245 |
| In common prudence they woud pass your door. | |
| Unpittyd Hudibrass, your Champion friend, | |
| Has shown how far your charities extend. | |
| This lasting verse shall on his tomb be read, | |
| He shamd you living, and upbraids you dead. | 250 |
| With odious Atheist names you load your foes, | |
| Your libral Clergy why did I expose? | |
| It never fails in charities like those. | |
| In climes where true religion is professd, | |
| That imputation were no laughing jest, | 255 |
| But Imprimatur, with a Chaplains name, | |
| Is here sufficient licence to defame. | |
| What wonder ist that black detraction thrives? | |
| The Homicide of names is less than lives, | |
| And yet the perjurd murtherer survives. | 260 |
| This said, she pausd a little, and suppressd | |
| The boiling indignation of her breast; | |
| She knew the vertue of her blade, nor woud | |
| Pollute her satyr with ignoble bloud: | |
| Her panting foes she saw before her lye, | 265 |
| And back she drew the shining weapon dry | |
| So when the genrous Lyon has in sight | |
| His equal match, he rouses for the fight; | |
| But when his foe lyes prostrate on the plain, | |
| He sheathes his paws, uncurls his angry mane; | 270 |
| And, pleasd with bloudless honours of the day, | |
| Walks over and disdains th inglorious Prey. | |
| So JAMES, if great with less we may compare, | |
| Arrests his rowling thunder-bolts in air; | |
| And grants ungratefull friends a lengthnd space, | 275 |
| T implore the remnants of long suffring grace. | |
| This breathing-time the Matron took; and then, | |
| Resumd the thrid of her discourse agen. | |
| Be vengeance wholly left to powrs divine, | |
| And let heavn judge betwixt your sons and mine: | 280 |
| If joyes hereafter must be purchasd here | |
| With loss of all that mortals hold so dear, | |
| Then welcome infamy and publick shame, | |
| And, last, a long farewell to worldly fame. | |
| Tis said with ease, but oh, how hardly tryd | 285 |
| By haughty souls to humane honour tyd! | |
| O sharp convulsive pangs of agonizing pride! | |
| Down then, thou rebell, never more to rise, | |
| And what thou didst and dost so dearly prize, | |
| That fame, that darling fame, make that thy sacrifice. | 290 |
| Tis nothing thou hast givn; then add thy tears | |
| For a long race of unrepenting years | |
| Tis nothing yet; yet all thou hast to give: | |
| Then add those may-be years thou hast to live. | |
| Yet nothing still: then poor, and naked come, | 295 |
| Thy father will receive his unthrift home, | |
| And thy blest Saviours bloud discharge the mighty sum. | |
| Thus (she pursud) I discipline a son | |
| Whose uncheckd fury to revenge woud run: | |
| He champs the bit, impatient of his loss, | 300 |
| And starts a-side and flounders at the cross. | |
| Instruct him better, gracious God, to know, | |
| As thine is vengeance, so forgiveness too; | |
| That, suffring from ill tongues he bears no more | |
| Than what his Sovereign bears, and what his Saviour bore. | 305 |
| It now remains for you to school your child, | |
| And ask why Gods anointed he revild; | |
| A King and Princess dead! did Shimei worse? | |
| The cursers punishment should fright the curse: | |
| Your son was warnd, and wisely gave it ore, | 310 |
| But he who councelld him has paid the score: | |
| The heavy malice coud no higher tend, | |
| But woe to him on whom the weights descend: | |
| So to permitted ills the Dæmon flys: | |
| His rage is aimd at him who rules the skyes; | 315 |
| Constraind to quit his cause, no succour found, | |
| The foe discharges evry Tyre around, | |
| In clouds of smoke abandoning the fight, | |
| But his own thundring peals proclaim his flight. | |
| In Henrys change his charge as ill succeeds; | 320 |
| To that long story little answer needs, | |
| Confront but Henrys words with Henrys deeds. | |
| Were space allowd, with ease it might be provd, | |
| What springs his blessed reformation movd. | |
| The dire effects appeard in open sight, | 325 |
| Which from the cause, he calls a distant flight | |
| And yet no larger leap than from the sun to light. | |
| Now last, your sons a double Pæan sound, | |
| A Treatise of Humility is found. | |
| Tis found, but better had it neer been sought | 330 |
| Than thus in Protestant procession brought. | |
| The famd original through Spain is known, | |
| Rodriguez work, my celebrated son, | |
| Which yours by ill-translating made his own; | |
| Conceald its authour, and usurpd the name, | 335 |
| The basest and ignoblest theft of fame. | |
| My Altars kindld first that living coal; | |
| Restore, or practice better what you stole: | |
| That vertue could this humble verse inspire, | |
| Tis all the restitution I require. | 340 |
| Glad was the Panther that the charge was closd, | |
| And none of all her favrite sons exposd. | |
| For laws of arms permit each injurd man | |
| To make himself a saver where he can. | |
| Perhaps the plunderd merchant cannot tell | 345 |
| The names of Pirates in whose hands he fell: | |
| But at the den of thieves he justly flies, | |
| And evry Algerine is lawfull prize. | |
| No private person in the foes estate | |
| Can plead exemption from the publick fate. | 350 |
| Yet Christian laws allow not such redress; | |
| Then let the greater supersede the less. | |
| But let th Abbetors of the Panthers crime | |
| Learn to make fairer wars another time. | |
| Some characters may sure be found to write | 355 |
| Among her sons; for tis no common sight, | |
| A spotted Dam, and all her offspring white. | |
| The Salvage, though she saw her plea controlld, | |
| Yet woud not wholly seem to quit her hold, | |
| But offerd fairly to compound the strife; | 360 |
| And judge conversion by the converts life. | |
| Tis true, she said, I think it somewhat strange | |
| So few shoud follow profitable change; | |
| For present joys are more to flesh and bloud | |
| Than a dull prospect of a distant good. | 365 |
| Twas well alluded by a son of mine, | |
| (I hope to quote him is not to purloin;) | |
| Two magnets, heavn and earth, allure to bliss; | |
| The larger loadstone that, the nearer this: | |
| The weak attraction of the greater fails, | 370 |
| We nodd a-while, but neighbourhood prevails: | |
| But when the greater proves the nearer too, | |
| I wonder more your converts come so slow. | |
| Methinks in those who firm with me remain, | |
| It shows a nobler principle than gain. | 375 |
| Your infrence woud be strong (the Hind replyd) | |
| If yours were in effect the suffring side; | |
| Your clergy sons their own in peace possess, | |
| Nor are their prospects in reversion less. | |
| My Proselytes are struck with awfull dread, | 380 |
| Your bloudy Comet-laws hang blazing ore their head. | |
| The respite they enjoy but onely lent, | |
| The best they have to hope, protracted punishment. | |
| Be judge your self, if intrest may prevail, | |
| Which motives, yours or mine, will turn the scale. | 385 |
| While pride and pomp allure, and plenteous ease, | |
| That is, till mans predominant passions cease, | |
| Admire no longer at my slow encrease. | |
| By education most have been misled; | |
| So they believe, because they so were bred. | 390 |
| The Priest continues what the nurse began, | |
| And thus the child imposes on the man. | |
| The rest I namd before, nor need repeat; | |
| But intrest is the most prevailing cheat, | |
| The sly seducer both of age and youth; | 395 |
| They study that, and think they study truth: | |
| When intrest fortifies an argument, | |
| Weak reason serves to gain the wills assent; | |
| For souls, already warpd, receive an easie bent. | |
| Add long prescription of establishd laws, | 400 |
| And picque of honour to maintain a cause, | |
| And shame of change, and fear of future ill, | |
| And Zeal, the blind conductor of the will; | |
| And chief among the still mistaking crowd, | |
| The fame of teachers obstinate and proud, | 405 |
| And, more than all, the private Judge allowed. | |
| Disdain of Fathers which the daunce began, | |
| And last, uncertain whose the narrower span, | |
| The clown unread, and half-read gentleman. | |
| To this the Panther, with a scornfull smile: | 410 |
| Yet still you travail with unwearied toil, | |
| And range around the realm without controll | |
| Among my sons for proselytes to prole, | |
| And here and there you snap some silly soul. | |
| You hinted fears of future change in state, | 415 |
| Pray heavn you did not prophesie your fate; | |
| Perhaps you think your time of triumph near, | |
| But may mistake the season of the year; | |
| The Swallows fortune gives you cause to fear. | |
| For charity (replyd the Matron) tell | 420 |
| What sad mischance those pretty birds befell. | |
| Nay, no mischance, (the salvage Dame replyd,) | |
| But want of wit in their unerring guide, | |
| And eager haste and gaudy hopes and giddy pride. | |
| Yet, wishing timely warning may prevail, | 425 |
| Make you the moral, and Ill tell the tale. | |
| The Swallow, privilegd above the rest | |
| Of all the birds as mans familiar guest, | |
| Pursues the Sun in summer brisk and bold, | |
| But wisely shuns the persecuting cold: | 430 |
| Is well to chancels and to chimnies known, | |
| Though tis not thought she feeds on smoak alone. | |
| From hence she has been held of heavnly line, | |
| Endud with particles of soul divine. | |
| This merry Chorister had long possessd | 435 |
| Her summer seat, and featherd well her nest: | |
| Till frowning skys began to change their chear, | |
| And time turnd up the wrong side of the year; | |
| The shedding trees began the ground to strow | |
| With yellow leaves, and bitter blasts to blow. | 440 |
| Sad auguries of winter thence she drew, | |
| Which by instinct, or Prophecy, she knew: | |
| When prudence warnd her to remove betimes, | |
| And seek a better heavn and warmer clymes. | |
| Her sons were summond on a steeples height, | 445 |
| And, calld in common council, vote a flight; | |
| The day was namd, the next that shoud be fair, | |
| All to the genral rendezvous repair, | |
| They try their fluttring wings and trust themselves in air. | |
| But whether upward to the moon they go, | 450 |
| Or dream the winter out in caves below, | |
| Or hawk at flies elsewhere, concerns not us to know. | |
| Southwards, you may be sure, they bent their flight, | |
| And harbourd in a hollow rock at night; | |
| Next morn they rose, and set up evry sail; | 455 |
| The wind was fair, but blew a mackrel gale: | |
| The sickly young sat shivring on the shoar, | |
| Abhorrd salt-water never seen before, | |
| And prayd their tender mothers to delay | |
| The passage, and expect a fairer day. | 460 |
| With these the Martyn readily concurrd, | |
| A church-begot and church-believing bird; | |
| Of little body, but of lofty mind, | |
| Round bellyd, for a dignity designd, | |
| And much a dunce, as Martyns are by kind. | 465 |
| Yet often quoted Canon-laws and Code | |
| And Fathers which he never understood, | |
| But little learning needs in noble bloud. | |
| For, sooth to say, the Swallow brought him in, | |
| Her household Chaplain, and her next of kin. | 470 |
| In Superstition silly to excess, | |
| And casting Schemes, by planetary guess: | |
| In fine, shortwingd, unfit himself to fly, | |
| His fear foretold foul-weather in the sky. | |
| Besides, a Raven from a withered Oak, | 475 |
| Left of their lodging, was observed to croke. | |
| That omen likd him not, so his advice | |
| Was present safety, bought at any price: | |
| (A seeming pious care that covered cowardise.) | |
| To strengthen this, he told a boding dream, | 480 |
| Of rising waters and a troubld stream, | |
| Sure signs of anguish, dangers, and distress, | |
| With something more, not lawfull to express: | |
| By which he slyly seemed to intimate | |
| Some secret revelation of their fate. | 485 |
| For he concluded, once upon a time, | |
| He found a leaf inscribd with sacred rime, | |
| Whose antique characters did well denote | |
| The Sibyls hand of the Cumæan Grott: | |
| The mad divineress had plainly writ, | 490 |
| A time should come (but many ages yet,) | |
| In which, sinister destinies ordain, | |
| A Dame should drown with all her featherd train, | |
| And seas from thence be called the Chelidonian main. | |
| At this, some shook for fear, the more devout | 495 |
| Arose, and blessd themselves from head to foot. | |
| Tis true, some stagers of the wiser sort | |
| Made all these idle wonderments their sport | |
| They said, their onely danger was delay, | |
| And he who heard what evry fool coud say, | 500 |
| Would never fix his thoughts, but trim his time away. | |
| The passage yet was good; the wind, tis true, | |
| Was somewhat high, but that was nothing new, | |
| Nor more than usual Equinoxes blew. | |
| The Sun (already from the scales declind) | 505 |
| Gave little hopes of better days behind, | |
| But change from bad to worse of weather and of wind. | |
| Nor need they fear the dampness of the Sky | |
| Should flag their wings, and hinder them to fly, | |
| Twas onely water thrown on sails too dry. | 510 |
| But, least of all, Philosophy presumes | |
| Of truth in dreams, from melancholy fumes; | |
| Perhaps the Martyn, housd in holy ground, | |
| Might think of Ghosts that walk their midnight round, | |
| Till grosser atoms tumbling in the stream | 515 |
| Of fancy, madly met and clubbd into a dream. | |
| As little weight his vain presages bear, | |
| Of ill effect to such alone who fear. | |
| Most prophecies are of a piece with these, | |
| Each Nostradamus can foretell with ease: | 520 |
| Not naming persons, and confounding times, | |
| One casual truth supports a thousand lying rimes. | |
| Th advice was true, but fear had seized the most, | |
| And all good counsel is on cowards lost. | |
| The question crudely put, to shun delay, | 525 |
| Twas carried by the major part to stay. | |
| His point thus gained, Sir Martyn dated thence | |
| His powr, and from a Priest became a Prince. | |
| He orderd all things with a busie care, | |
| And cells, and refectories did prepare, | 530 |
| And large provisions laid of winter fare. | |
| But now and then let fall a word or two | |
| Of hope, that heavn some miracle might show, | |
| And, for their sakes the sun should backward go; | |
| Against the laws of nature upward climb, | 535 |
| And, mounted on the Ram, renew the prime: | |
| For which two proofs in Sacred story lay, | |
| Of Ahaz dial and of Joshuahs day. | |
| In expectation of such times as these | |
| A chapel housd em, truly called of ease: | 540 |
| For Martyn much devotion did not ask, | |
| They prayd sometimes, and that was all their task. | |
| It happend (as beyond the reach of wit | |
| Blind prophecies may have a lucky hit) | |
| That this accomplishd, or at least in part, | 545 |
| Gave great repute to their new Merlins art. | |
| Some Swifts, 1 the Gyants of the Swallow kind, | |
| Large limbd, stout-hearted, but of stupid mind, | |
| (For Swisses, or for Gibeonites designd,) | |
| These Lubbers, peeping through a broken pane, | 550 |
| To suck fresh air, surveyd the neighbouring plain; | |
| And saw (but scarcely could believe their eyes) | |
| New Blossoms flourish and new flowrs arise; | |
| As God had been abroad, and walking there | |
| Had left his foot-steps and reformd the year: | 555 |
| The sunny hills from far were seen to glow | |
| With glittering beams, and in the meads below | |
| The burnishd brooks appeard with liquid gold to flow. | |
| At last they heard the foolish Cuckow sing, | |
| Whose note proclaimd the holy-day of spring. | 560 |
| No longer doubting, all prepare to fly | |
| And repossess their patrimonial sky. | |
| The Priest before em did his wings display; | |
| And that good omens might attend their way, | |
| As luck woud have it, twas St. Martyns day. | 565 |
| Who but the Swallow now triumphs alone? | |
| The Canopy of heaven is all her own; | |
| Her youthfull offspring to their haunts repair; | |
| And glide along in glades, and skim in air, | |
| And dip for insects in the purling springs, | 570 |
| And stoop on rivers to refresh their wings. | |
| Their mothers think a fair provision made, | |
| That evry son can live upon his trade, | |
| And now the carefull charge is off their hands, | |
| Look out for husbands and new nuptial bands: | 575 |
| The youthfull widow longs to be supplyd; | |
| But first the lover is by Lawyers tyd | |
| To settle jointure-chimneys on the bride. | |
| So thick they couple, in so short a space, | |
| That Martyns marrage offerings rise apace; | 580 |
| Their ancient houses, running to decay, | |
| Are furbishd up and cemented with clay; | |
| They teem already; stores of eggs are laid, | |
| And brooding mothers call Lucinas aid. | |
| Fame spreads the news, and foreign fowls appear | 585 |
| In flocks to greet the new returning year, | |
| To bless the founder, and partake the cheer. | |
| And now twas time (so fast their numbers rise) | |
| To plant abroad, and people colonies; | |
| The youth drawn forth, as Martyn had desird | 590 |
| (For so their cruel destiny requird) | |
| Were sent far off on an ill fated day; | |
| The rest woud need conduct em on their way, | |
| And Martyn went, because he feard alone to stay. | |
| So long they flew with inconsiderate haste, | 595 |
| That now their afternoon began to waste; | |
| And, what was ominous, that very morn | |
| The Sun was entrd into Capricorn; | |
| Which, by their bad Astronomers account, | |
| That week the virgin balance shoud remount; | 600 |
| An infant moon eclipsd him in his way, | |
| And hid the small remainders of his day: | |
| The crowd 2 amazd pursued no certain mark; | |
| But birds met birds, and justled in the dark; | |
| Few mind the publick in a Panick fright; | 605 |
| And fear increasd the horrour of the night. | |
| Night came, but unattended with repose; | |
| Alone she came, no sleep their eyes to close, | |
| Alone, and black she came, no friendly stars arose. | |
| What shoud they doe, beset with dangers round, | 610 |
| No neighbouring Dorp, no lodging to be found, | |
| But bleaky plains, and bare unhospitable ground? | |
| The latter brood, who just began to fly, | |
| Sick-feathered and unpractisd in the sky, | |
| For succour to their helpless mother call, | 615 |
| She spread her wings; some few beneath em craul, | |
| She spread em wider yet, but coud not cover all. | |
| T augment their woes, the winds began to move | |
| Debate in air, for empty fields above, | |
| Till Boreas got the skyes, and poured amain | 620 |
| His ratling hail-stones mixd with snow and rain. | |
| The joyless morning late arose and found | |
| A dreadfull desolation reign a-round, | |
| Some buried in the Snow, some frozen to the ground: | |
| The rest were strugling still with death, and lay | 625 |
| The Crows and Ravens rights, an undefended prey; | |
| Excepting Martyns race, for they and he | |
| Had gaind the shelter of a hollow tree, | |
| But soon discoverd by a sturdy clown, | |
| He headed all the rabble of a town, | 630 |
| And finished em with bats, or polld em down. | |
| Martyn himself was caught a-live, and tryd | |
| For treasnous crimes, because the laws provide | |
| No Martyn there in winter shall abide. | |
| High on an Oak which never leaf shall bear, | 635 |
| He breathd his last, exposed to open air, | |
| And there his corps, unblessd, is 3 hanging still, | |
| To show the change of winds with his prophetick bill. | |
| The patience of the Hind did almost fail, | |
| For well she markd the malice of the tale: | 640 |
| Which Ribbald art their church to Luther owes, | |
| In malice it began, by malice grows, | |
| He sowed the Serpents teeth, an iron-harvest rose. | |
| But most in Martyns character and fate, | |
| She saw her slanderd sons, the Panthers hate, | 645 |
| The peoples rage, the persecuting state: | |
| Then said, I take th advice in friendly part, | |
| You clear your conscience, or at least your heart: | |
| Perhaps you faild in your fore-seeing skill, | |
| For Swallows are unlucky birds to kill: | 650 |
| As for my sons, the family is blessd, | |
| Whose every child is equal to the rest: | |
| No church reformd can boast a blameless line; | |
| Such Martyns build in yours, and more than mine: | |
| Or else an old fanatick Author lyes, | 655 |
| Who summd their Scandals up by Centuries. | |
| But through your parable I plainly see | |
| The bloudy laws, the crowds barbarity: | |
| The sun-shine that offends the purblind sight, | |
| Had some their wishes, it woud soon be night. | 660 |
| Mistake me not, the charge concerns not you, | |
| Your sons are male-contents, but yet are true. | |
| As far as non-resistance makes em so, | |
| But thats a word of neutral sense you know, | |
| A passive term, which no relief will bring, | 665 |
| But trims betwixt a rebell and a king. | |
| Rest well assured, the Pardelis replyd, | |
| My sons woud all support the regal side, | |
| Though heavn forbid the cause by battel should be tryd. | |
| The Matron answered with a loud Amen, | 670 |
| And thus pursud her argument agen. | |
| If, as you say, and as I hope no less, | |
| Your sons will practise what your self profess, | |
| What angry powr prevents our present peace? | |
| The Lyon, studious of our common good, | 675 |
| Desires (and Kings desires are ill withstood) | |
| To join our Nations in a lasting love; | |
| The barrs betwixt are easie to remove, | |
| For sanguinary laws were never made above. | |
| If you condemn that Prince of Tyranny | 680 |
| Whose mandate forced your Gallick friends to fly, | |
| Make not a worse example of your own, | |
| Or cease to rail at causeless rigour shown, | |
| And let the guiltless person throw the stone. | |
| His blunted sword, your suffring brotherhood | 685 |
| Have seldom felt, he stops it short of bloud: | |
| But you have ground the persecuting knife | |
| And set it to a razor edge on life. | |
| Cursd be the wit which cruelty refines | |
| Or to his fathers rod the Scorpion joins; | 690 |
| Your finger is more gross than the great Monarchs loins. | |
| But you perhaps remove that bloudy note, | |
| And stick it on the first Reformers coat. | |
| Oh let their crime in long oblivion sleep, | |
| Twas theirs indeed to make, tis yours to keep. | 695 |
| Unjust, or just, is all the question now, | |
| Tis plain, that not repealing you allow. | |
| To name the Test woud put you in a rage; | |
| You charge not that on any former age, | |
| But smile to think how innocent you stand | 700 |
| Armd by a weapon put into your hand. | |
| Yet still remember that you weild a sword | |
| Forgd by your foes against your Sovereign Lord. | |
| Designed to hew th imperial Cedar down, | |
| Defraud Succession and dis-heir the Crown. | 705 |
| T abhor the makers, and their laws approve, | |
| Is to hate Traytors and the treason love: | |
| What means it else, which now your children say, | |
| We made it not, nor will we take away? | |
| Suppose some great Oppressor had by slight | 710 |
| Of law, disseisd your brother of his right, | |
| Your common sire surrendring in a fright; | |
| Would you to that unrighteous title stand, | |
| Left by the villains will to heir the land? | |
| More just was Judas, who his Saviour sold; | 715 |
| The sacrilegious bribe he coud not hold, | |
| Nor hang in peace, before he rendrd back the gold. | |
| What more could you have done than now you doe, | |
| Had Oates and Bedlow, and their Plot been true? | |
| Some specious reasons for those wrongs were found; | 720 |
| The dire Magicians threw their mists around, | |
| And wise men walkd as on enchanted ground. | |
| But now when time has made th imposture plain, | |
| (Late though he followd truth, & limping held her train,) | |
| What new delusion charms your cheated eyes again? | 725 |
| The painted Harlot might a while bewitch, | |
| But why the Hag uncasd and all obscene with itch? | |
| The first Reformers were a modest race; | |
| Our Peers possessed in peace their native place: | |
| And when rebellious arms oreturned the state | 730 |
| They sufferd onely in the common fate; | |
| But now the Sovreign mounts the regal chair | |
| And mitrd seats are full, yet Davids bench is bare: | |
| Your answer is, they were not dispossessd, | |
| They need but rub their mettle on the Test | 735 |
| To prove their ore: twere well if gold alone | |
| Were touchd and tryd on your discerning stone; | |
| But that unfaithfull Test unfound will pass | |
| The dross of Atheists and sectarian brass: | |
| As if the experiment were made to hold | 740 |
| For base productions, and reject the gold: | |
| Thus men ungodded may to places rise, | |
| And sects may be preferrd without disguise: | |
| No danger to the church or state from these; | |
| The Papist onely has his Writ of ease. | 745 |
| No gainfull office gives him the pretence | |
| To grind the Subject or defraud the Prince. | |
| Wrong conscience, or no conscience may deserve | |
| To thrive, but ours alone is privilegd to sterve. | |
| Still thank your selves, you cry, your noble race | 750 |
| We banish not, but they forsake the place. | |
| Our doors are open: true, but eer they come, | |
| You toss your censing Test and fume the room; | |
| As if twere Tobys rival to expell, | |
| And fright the fiend who could not bear the smell. | 755 |
| To this the Panther sharply had replyd; | |
| But, having gaind a Verdict on her side, | |
| She wisely gave the loser leave to chide; | |
| Well satisfied to have the But 4 and peace, | |
| And for the Plaintiffs cause she card the less, | 760 |
| Because she sud in formâ Pauperis; | |
| Yet thought it decent something shoud be said, | |
| For secret guilt by silence is betrayd: | |
| So neither granted all, nor much denyd, | |
| But answerd with a yawning kind of pride. | 765 |
| Methinks such terms of proferrd peace you bring, | |
| As once Æneas to th Italian King: | |
| By long possession all the land is mine, | |
| You strangers come with your intruding line | |
| To share my sceptre, which you call to join. | 770 |
| You plead like him an ancient Pedigree, | |
| And claim a peacefull seat by fates decree. | |
| In ready pomp your Sacrificer stands, | |
| To unite the Trojan and the Latin bands, | |
| And that the league more firmly may be tyd, | 775 |
| Demand the fair Lavinia for your bride. | |
| Thus plausibly you veil th intended wrong, | |
| But still you bring your exild gods along; | |
| And will endeavour in succeeding space, | |
| Those household Poppits on our hearths to place. | 780 |
| Perhaps some barbrous laws have been preferrd; | |
| I spake against the Test, but was not heard. | |
| These to rescind and Peerage to restore | |
| My gracious Sovreign woud my vote implore: | |
| I owe him much, but owe my conscience more. | 785 |
| Conscience is then your Plea, replied the Dame, | |
| Which well-informed will ever be the same. | |
| But yours is much of the Camelion hue, | |
| To change the dye with evry diffrent view. | |
| When first the Lyon sat with awfull sway, | 790 |
| Your conscience taught you duty to obey; | |
| He might have had your Statutes and your Test; | |
| No conscience but of subjects was professd. | |
| He found your temper, and no farther tryd, | |
| But on that broken reed your church relyd. | 795 |
| In vain the sects assayd their utmost art, | |
| With offered treasures to espouse their part, | |
| Their treasures were a bribe too mean to move his heart. | |
| But when by long experience you had proovd | |
| How far he coud forgive, how well he lovd; | 800 |
| A goodness that excelld his godlike race, | |
| And onely short of heavns unbounded grace: | |
| A floud of mercy that oerflowed our Isle, | |
| Calm in the rise, and fruitfull as the Nile, | |
| Forgetting whence your Ægypt was supplyd, | 805 |
| You thought your Sovreign bound to send the tide; | |
| Nor upward lookd on that immortal spring, | |
| But vainly deemd, he durst not be a king: | |
| Then conscience, unrestraind by fear, began | |
| To stretch her limits, and extend the span, | 810 |
| Did his indulgence as her gift dispose, | |
| And made a wise Alliance with her foes. | |
| Can conscience own th associating name, | |
| And raise no blushes to conceal her shame? | |
| For sure she has been thought a bashfull Dame. | 815 |
| But if the cause by battel should be tryd, | |
| You grant she must espouse the regal side: | |
| O Proteus Conscience, never to be tyd! | |
| What Phbus from the Tripod shall disclose, | |
| Which are in last resort, your friends or foes? | 820 |
| Homer, who learnd the language of the sky, | |
| The seeming Gordian knot woud soon unty; | |
| Immortal powrs the term of conscience know, | |
| But intrest is her name with men below. | |
| Conscience or intrest be t, or both in one; | 825 |
| (The Panther answered in a surly tone,) | |
| The first commands me to maintain the Crown, | |
| The last forbids to throw my barriers down. | |
| Our penal laws no sons of yours admit, | |
| Our Test excludes your Tribe from benefit. | 830 |
| These are my banks your ocean to withstand, | |
| Which proudly rising overlooks the land: | |
| And once let in, with unresisted sway | |
| Woud sweep the Pastors and their flocks away. | |
| Think not my judgment leads me to comply | 835 |
| With laws unjust, but hard necessity: | |
| Imperious need which cannot be withstood | |
| Makes ill authentick, for a greater good. | |
| Possess your soul with patience, and attend: | |
| A more auspicious Planet may ascend; | 840 |
| Good fortune may present some happier time, | |
| With means to cancel my unwilling crime; | |
| (Unwilling, witness all ye Powrs above) | |
| To mend my errours and redeem your love: | |
| That little space you safely may allow, | 845 |
| Your all-dispensing powr protects you now. | |
| Hold, said the Hind, tis needless to explain: | |
| You would postpone me to another reign: | |
| Till when you are content to be unjust, | |
| Your part is to possess, and mine to trust. | 850 |
| A fair exchange proposd of future chance, | |
| For present profit and inheritance: | |
| Few words will serve to finish our dispute, | |
| Who will not now repeal woud persecute; | |
| To ripen green revenge your hopes attend, | 855 |
| Wishing that happier Planet woud ascend: | |
| For shame let Conscience be your Plea no more, | |
| To will hereafter proves she might before; | |
| But shes a Bawd to gain, and holds the Door. | |
| Your care about your Banks, infers a fear | 860 |
| Of threatning Floods and Inundations near; | |
| If so, a just Reprise would only be | |
| Of what the Land usurped upon the Sea; | |
| And all your Jealousies but serve to show | |
| Your Ground is, like your Neighbour-Nation, low. | 865 |
| T intrench in what you grant unrighteous Laws | |
| Is to distrust the justice of your Cause; | |
| And argues that the true religion lyes | |
| In those weak Adversaries you despise. | |
| Tyrannick force is that which least you fear, | 870 |
| The sound is frightfull in a Christians ear: | |
| Avert it, Heavn; nor let that Plague be sent | |
| To us from the dispeopled Continent. | |
| But Piety commands me to refrain; | |
| Those Prayrs are needless in this Monarchs Reign. | 875 |
| Behold! how he protects your Friends opprest, | |
| Receives the Banishd, succours the Distressd: | |
| Behold, for you may read an honest open breast. | |
| He stands in Day-light, and disdains to hide | |
| An Act to which by Honour he is tyd, | 880 |
| A generous, laudable, and Kingly Pride. | |
| Your Test he would repeal, his Peers restore, | |
| This when he says he means, he means no more. | |
| Well, said the Panther, I believe him just, | |
And yet And yet, tis but because you must, | 885 |
| You would be trusted, but you would not trust. | |
| The Hind thus briefly; and disdained t inlarge | |
| On Powr of Kings, and their Superiour charge, | |
| As Heavns Trustees before the Peoples choice: | |
| Tho sure the Panther did not much rejoyce | 890 |
| To hear those Echos given of her once Loyal voice. | |
| The Matron wood her Kindness to the last, | |
| But coud not win; her hour of Grace was past. | |
| Whom, thus persisting, when she could not bring | |
| To leave the Woolf and to believe her King, | 895 |
| She gave Her up, and fairly wished her Joy | |
| Of her late Treaty with her new Ally: | |
| Which well she hopd woud more successfull prove, | |
| Than was the Pigeons and the Buzzards love. | |
| The Panther askd what concord there coud be | 900 |
| Betwixt two kinds whose Natures disagree? | |
| The Dame replyd, Tis sung in evry Street, | |
| The common chat of Gossips when they meet: | |
| But, since unheard by you, tis worth your while | |
| To take a wholesome Tale, though told in homely stile. | 905 |
| A plain good Man, whose Name is understood, | |
| (So few deserve the name of Plain and Good) | |
| Of three fair lineal Lordships stood possessd, | |
| And livd, as reason was, upon the best. | |
| Inurd to hardships from his early Youth, | 910 |
| Much had he done and suffered for his truth: | |
| At Land, and Sea, in many a doubtfull Fight, | |
| Was never known a more adventrous Knight, | |
| Who oftner drew his Sword, and always for the right. | |
| As fortune woud (his fortune came tho late) | 915 |
| He took Possession of his just Estate; | |
| Nor rackd his Tenants with increase of Rent, | |
| Nor livd too sparing, nor too largely spent; | |
| But overlookd his Hinds, their Pay was just | |
| And ready, for he scornd to go on trust: | 920 |
| Slow to resolve, but in performance quick; | |
| So true, that he was awkward at a trick. | |
| For little Souls on little shifts rely, | |
| And coward Arts of mean Expedients try: | |
| The noble Mind will dare do anything but lye. | 925 |
| False friends, (his deadliest foes,) could find no way | |
| But shows of honest bluntness, to betray; | |
| That unsuspected plainness he believd; | |
| He looked into Himself, and was deceivd. | |
| Some lucky Planet sure attends his Birth, | 930 |
| Or Heavn would make a Miracle on Earth; | |
| For prosprous Honesty is seldom seen | |
| To bear so dead a weight, and yet to win; | |
| It looks as Fate with Natures Law would strive, | |
| To show Plain-dealing once an age may thrive: | 935 |
| And, when so tough a frame she could not bend, | |
| Exceeded her Commission to befriend. | |
| This gratefull man, as Heaven encreasd his Store, | |
| Gave God again, and daily fed his Poor; | |
| His House with all convenience was purveyd; | 940 |
| The rest he found, but raisd the Fabrick where he prayd; | |
| And in that Sacred Place his beauteous Wife | |
| Employd Her happiest hours of Holy Life. | |
| Nor did their Alms extend to those alone | |
| Whom common Faith more strictly made their own; | 945 |
| A sort of Doves were housd too near their Hall, | |
| Who cross the Proverb, and abound with Gall. | |
| Tho some, tis true, are passively inclind, | |
| The greater Part degenerate from their kind; | |
| Voracious Birds, that hotly Bill and breed, | 950 |
| And largely drink, because on Salt they feed. | |
| Small Gain from them their Bounteous Owner draws; | |
| Yet, bound by Promise, he supports their Cause, | |
| As Corporations priviledgd by Laws. | |
| That House, which harbour to their kind affords, | 955 |
| Was built, long since, God knows, for better Birds; | |
| But fluttring there, they nestle near the Throne, | |
| And lodge in Habitations not their own, | |
| By their high Crops, and Corny Gizzards known. | |
| Like Harpys, they could scent a plenteous board; | 960 |
| Then, to be sure, they never faild their Lord. | |
| The rest was form, and bare Attendance paid, | |
| They drunk, and eat, and grudgingly obeyd. | |
| The more they fed, they ravend still for more, | |
| They draind from Dan, and left Beersheba poor; | 965 |
| All this they had by Law, and none repind, | |
| The prefrence was but due to Levis Kind, | |
| But when some Lay-preferment fell by chance | |
| The Gourmands made it their Inheritance. | |
| When once possessd they never quit their Claim, | 970 |
| For then tis sanctifyd to Heavns high Name; | |
| And Hallowd thus, they cannot give Consent, | |
| The Gift should be prophand by Worldly management. | |
| Their Flesh was never to the Table served; | |
| Tho tis not thence inferrd the Birds were starvd; | 975 |
| But that their Master did not like the Food, | |
| As rank, and breeding Melancholy Blood. | |
| Nor did it with His Gracious Nature suite, | |
| Evn though they were not Doves, to persecute: | |
| Yet He refused, (nor could they take Offence) | 980 |
| Their Glutton Kind should teach him abstinence. | |
| Nor Consecrated Grain their Wheat he thought, | |
| Which, new from treading, in their Bills they brought: | |
| But left his Hinds, each in his Private Powr, | |
| That those who like the Bran might leave the Flowr. | 985 |
| He for himself, and not for others chose, | |
| Nor would He be imposd on, nor impose; | |
| But in their Faces His Devotion paid, | |
| And Sacrifice with Solemn Rites was made, | |
| And Sacred Incense on his Altars laid. | 990 |
| Besides these jolly Birds, whose Crops impure | |
| Repaid their Commons with their Salt Manure, | |
| Another Farm he had behind his House, | |
| Not overstockt, but barely for his use; | |
| Wherein his poor Domestick poultry Fed | 995 |
| And from His Pious Hands received their Bread. | |
| Our pamperd Pigeons with malignant Eyes | |
| Beheld these Inmates and their Nurseries: | |
| Tho hard their fare, at Evning and at Morn, | |
| A Cruise of Water and an Ear of Corn, | 1000 |
| Yet still they grudgd that Modicum, and thought | |
| A Sheaf in evry single Grain was brought; | |
| Fain would they filch that little Food away, | |
| While unrestraind those happy Gluttons prey. | |
| And much they grievd to see so nigh their Hall | 1005 |
| The Bird that warned St. Peter of his Fall; | |
| That he should raise his miterd Crest on high, | |
| And clap his Wings and call his Family | |
| To Sacred Rites; and vex th Etherial Powrs | |
| With midnight Mattins at uncivil Hours: | 1010 |
| Nay more, his quiet Neighbours should molest, | |
| Just in the sweetness of their Morning rest. | |
| Beast of a bird, supinely when he might | |
| Lye snugg and sleep, to rise before the light: | |
| What if his dull Forefathers used that cry, | 1015 |
| Coud he not let a Bad Example dye? | |
| The World was fallen into an easier way; | |
| This Age knew better, than to Fast and Pray. | |
| Good Sense in Sacred Worship would appear | |
| So to begin, as they might end the year. | 1020 |
| Such feats in former times had wrought the falls | |
| Of crowing Chanticleers in Cloysterd Walls. | |
| Expelld for this and for their Lands, they fled; | |
| And Sister Partlet, with her hooded head | |
| Was hooted hence, because she would not pray a-Bed. 5 | 1025 |
| The way to win the restiff World to God | |
| Was to lay by the Disciplining Rod, | |
| Unnatural Fasts, and Foreign Forms of Prayr; | |
| Religion frights us with a meen severe. | |
| Tis Prudence to reform her into Ease, | 1030 |
| And put Her in Undress, to make Her pleas; | |
| A lively Faith will bear aloft the Mind | |
| And leave the Luggage of Good Works behind. | |
| Such Doctrines in the Pigeon-house were taught; | |
| You need not ask how wondrously they wrought; | 1035 |
| But sure the common Cry was all for these, | |
| Whose Life, and Precept both encouragd Ease. | |
| Yet fearing those alluring Baits might fail, | |
| And Holy Deeds ore all their Arts prevail, | |
| (For Vice, tho frontless and of hardend Face, | 1040 |
| Is daunted at the sight of awfull Grace,) | |
| An hideous Figure of their Foes they drew | |
| Nor Lines, nor Looks, nor Shades, nor Colours true; | |
| And this Grotesque design, exposd to Publick view. | |
| One would have thought it some Ægyptian Piece, | 1045 |
| With Garden-Gods, and barking Deities, | |
| More thick than Ptolomey has stuck the Skies. | |
| All so perverse a Draught, so far unlike, | |
| It was no Libell where it meant to strike: | |
| Yet still the daubing pleasd, and Great and Small | 1050 |
| To view the Monster crowded Pigeon-hall. | |
| There Chanticleer was drawn upon his knees, | |
| Adoring Shrines, and Stocks of Sainted Trees; | |
| And by him a mishapen, ugly Race; | |
| The curse of God was seen on evry face. | 1055 |
| No Holland emblem could that Malice mend, | |
| But still the worse the look the fitter for a Fiend. | |
| The Master of the Farm, displeasd to find | |
| So much of Rancour in so mild a kind, | |
| Enquird into the Cause, and came to know, | 1060 |
| The Passive Church had struck the foremost blow: | |
| With groundless Fears, and Jealousies possest, | |
| As if this troublesome intruding Guest | |
| Would drive the Birds of Venus from their Nest. | |
| A Deed his inborn Equity abhorrd, | 1065 |
| But Intrest will not trust, tho God should plight his Word. | |
| A Law, the Source of many Future harms, | |
| Had banishd all the Poultry from the Farms; | |
| With loss of Life, if any should be found | |
| To crow or peck on this forbidden Ground. | 1070 |
| That Bloody Statute chiefly was designd | |
| For Chanticleer the white, of Clergy kind; | |
| But after-malice did not long forget | |
| The Lay that wore the Robe and Coronet. | |
| For them, for their Inferiours and Allyes, | 1075 |
| Their Foes a deadly Shibboleth devise: | |
| By which unrighteously it was decreed, | |
| That none to Trust, or Profit should succeed, | |
| Who would not swallow first a poysonous wicked Weed; | |
| Or that to which old Socrates was curst, | 1080 |
| Or Henbane-Juice to swellem till they burst. | |
| The Patron (as in reason) thought it hard | |
| To see this Inquisition in his Yard, | |
| By which the Soveraign was of Subjects use debarred. | |
| All gentle means he tryd, which might withdraw | 1085 |
| Th Effects of so unnatural a Law: | |
| But still the Dove-house obstinately stood | |
| Deaf to their own, and to their Neighbours good: | |
| And which was worse, (if any worse could be) | |
| Repented of their boasted Loyalty: | 1090 |
| Now made the Champions of a cruel Cause, | |
| And drunk with Fumes of Popular Applause; | |
| For those whom God to ruine has designd, | |
| He fits for Fate, and first destroys their Mind. | |
| New Doubts indeed they daily strove to raise, | 1095 |
| Suggested Dangers, interposd Delays; | |
| And Emissary Pigeons had in store, | |
| Such as the Meccan Prophet usd of yore, | |
| To whisper Counsels in their Patrons Ear; | |
| And veild their false Advice with Zealous Fear. | 1100 |
| The Master smiled to see em work in vain, | |
| To wear him out and make an idle reign: | |
| He saw, but sufferd their Protractive Arts, | |
| And strove by mildness to reduce their Hearts; | |
| But they abused that Grace to make Allyes | 1105 |
| And fondly closd with former Enemies; | |
| For fools are double Fools, endeavring to be wise. | |
| After a grave Consult what course were best, | |
| One, more mature in Folly than the rest, | |
| Stood up, and told em with his head aside, | 1110 |
| That desprate Cures must be to desprate Ills applyd: | |
| And therefore, since their main impending fear | |
| Was from th encreasing race of Chanticleer: | |
| Some Potent Bird of Prey they ought to find, | |
| A Foe professd to him and all his kind: | 1115 |
| Some haggard Hawk, who had her eyry nigh, | |
| Well pouncd to fasten, and well wingd to fly; | |
| One they might trust, their common wrongs to wreak: | |
| The Musquet, and the Coystrel were too weak, | |
| Too fierce the Falcon, but, above the rest, | 1120 |
| The noble Buzzard ever pleasd me best; | |
| Of small Renown, tis true; for, not to lye, | |
| We call him but a Hawk by courtesie. | |
| I know he haunts the Pigeon-house and Farm, | |
| And more, in time of War has done us harm; | 1125 |
| But all his hate on trivial Points depends, | |
| Give up our Forms, and we shall soon be friends. | |
| For Pigeons flesh he seems not much to care; | |
| Cramd Chickens are a more delicious fare; | |
| On this high Potentate, without delay, | 1130 |
| I wish you would conferr the Sovereign sway; | |
| Petition him t accept the Government, | |
| And let a splendid Embassy be sent. | |
| This pithy speech prevaild; and all agreed, | |
| Old Enmitys forgot, the Buzzard should succeed. | 1135 |
| Their welcom Suit was granted soon as heard, | |
| His Lodgings furnishd, and a Train prepard, | |
| With Bs upon their Breast, appointed for his Guard. | |
| He came, and Crownd with great Solemnity, | |
| God save King Buzzard, was the genrall cry. | 1140 |
| A Portly Prince, and goodly to the sight, | |
| He seemd a Son of Anach for his height: | |
| Like those whom stature did to Crowns prefer; | |
| Black-browd and bluff, like Homers Jupiter; | |
| Broad-backed and Brawny built for Loves delight, | 1145 |
| A Prophet formd to make a female Proselyte. | |
| A Theologue more by need, than genial bent, | |
| By Breeding sharp, by Nature confident, | |
| Intrest in all his Actions was discernd; | |
| More leérnd than Honest, more a Wit than learnd. | 1150 |
| Or forcd by Fear, or by his Profit led, | |
| Or both conjoynd, his Native clime he fled: | |
| But brought the Vertues of his Heavn along; | |
| A fair Behaviour, and a fluent Tongue. | |
| And yet with all his Arts he could not thrive; | 1155 |
| The must unlucky Parasite alive. | |
| Loud Praises to prepare his Paths he sent, | |
| And then himself pursud his Compliment! | |
| But, by reverse of Fortune chacd away, | |
| His Gifts no longer than their Author stay; | 1160 |
| He shakes the Dust against th ungrateful race, | |
| And leaves the stench of Ordures in the place. | |
| Oft has he flatterd, and blasphemd the same, | |
| For in his Rage, he spares no Sovrains name: | |
| The Hero, and the Tyrant change their style | 1165 |
| By the same measure that they frown or smile; | |
| When well receivd by hospitable Foes, | |
| The kindness he returns, is to expose: | |
| For Courtesies, tho undeservd and great, | |
| No gratitude in Fellon-minds beget; | 1170 |
| As tribute to his Wit, the churl receives the treat. | |
| His praise of Foes is venomously Nice, | |
| So touchd, it turns a Vertue to a Vice: | |
| A Greek, and bountiful forewarns us twice. | |
| Sevn sacraments he wisely dos disown, | 1175 |
| Because he knows Confession stands for one; | |
| Where sins to sacred silence are conveyd, | |
| And not for Fear, or Love, to be betrayd: | |
| But he, uncalld, his Patron to controul, | |
| Divulgd the secret whispers of his Soul; | 1180 |
| Stood forth th accusing Sathan of his Crimes, | |
| And offerd to the Moloch of the Times. | |
| Prompt to assayle, and careless of defence, | |
| Invulnerable in his Impudence, | |
| He dares the World, and, eager of a name, | 1185 |
| He thrusts about, and justles into fame. | |
| Frontless and Satyr-proof, he scowrs the streets, | |
| And runs an Indian muck at all he meets. | |
| So fond of loud Report, that not to miss | |
| Of being known (his last and utmost bliss) | 1190 |
| He rather would be known, for what he is. | |
| Such was and is the Captain of the test, | |
| Tho half his Vertues are not here expresst; | |
| The modesty of Fame conceals the rest. | |
| The spleenful Pigeons never could create | 1195 |
| A Prince more proper to revenge their hate; | |
| Indeed, more proper to revenge, than save; | |
| A King, whom in his wrath, th Almighty gave: | |
| For all the Grace the Landlord had allowd | |
| But made the Buzzard and the Pigeons proud, | 1200 |
| Gave time to fix their Friends, and to seduce the Crowd. | |
| They long their Fellow-Subjects to inthrall, | |
| Their Patrons promise into question call, | |
| And vainly think he meant to make em Lords of all. | |
| False Fears their Leaders faild not to suggest, | 1205 |
| As if the Doves were to be dispossesst; | |
| Nor Sighs nor Groans nor gogling Eyes did want, | |
| For now the Pigeons too had learned to Cant. | |
| The House of Prayr is stockd with large encrease; | |
| Nor Doors, nor Windows can contain the Press: | 1210 |
| For Birds of evry feather fill th abode; | |
| Evn Atheists out of envy own a God: | |
| And, reeking from the Stews, Adultrers come, | |
| Like Goths and Vandals to demolish Rome. | |
| That Conscience, which to all their Crimes was mute, | 1215 |
| Now calls aloud, and cryes to Persecute. | |
| No rigour of the Laws to be releasd, | |
| And much the less, because it was their Lords request: | |
| They thought it great their Sovrain to controul, | |
| And namd their Pride, Nobility of Soul. | 1220 |
| Tis true, the Pigeons and their Prince Elect | |
| Were short of Powr their purpose to effect: | |
| But with their quills, did all the hurt they coud, | |
| And cuffd the tender Chickens from their food: | |
| And much the Buzzard in their Cause did stir, | 1225 |
| Tho naming not the Patron, to infer, | |
| With all respect, He was a gross Idolater. | |
| But when th Imperial owner did espy | |
| That thus they turnd his Grace to villany, | |
| Not suffring wrath to discompose his mind, | 1230 |
| He strove a temper for th extreams to find, | |
| So to be just, as he might still be kind. | |
| Then, all maturely weighd, pronouncd a Doom | |
| Of Sacred Strength for evry Age to come. | |
| By this the Doves their Wealth and State possess, | 1235 |
| No Rights infringd, but Licence to oppress: | |
| Such Powr have they as Factious Lawyers long | |
| To Crowns ascribd, that Kings can do no wrong. | |
| But, since his own Domestick Birds have tryd | |
| The dire Effects of their destructive Pride, | 1240 |
| He deems that Proof a Measure to the rest, | |
| Concluding well within his Kingly Breast | |
| His Fowl of Nature too unjustly were opprest. | |
| He therefore makes all Birds of evry Sect | |
| Free of his Farm, with promise to respect | 1245 |
| Their sevral Kinds alike, and equally protect. | |
| His Gracious Edict the same Franchise yields | |
| To all the wild Encrease of Woods and Fields, | |
| And who in Rocks aloof, and who in Steeples builds. | |
| To Crows the like Impartial Grace affords, | 1250 |
| And Choughs and Daws, and such Republick Birds: | |
| Securd with ample Priviledge to feed, | |
| Each has his District, and his Bounds decreed: | |
| Combind in common Intrest with his own, | |
| But not to pass the Pigeons Rubicon. | 1255 |
| Here ends the Reign of this pretended Dove; | |
| All Prophecies accomplishd from above, | |
| For Shiloh comes the Scepter to remove. | |
| Reducd from Her Imperial High Abode, | |
| Like Dyonysius to a private Rod, | 1260 |
| The Passive Church, that with pretended Grace | |
| Did Her distinctive Mark in duty place, | |
| Now Touchd, Reviles her Maker to his Face. | |
| What after happend is not hard to guess; | |
| The small Beginnings had a large Encrease, | 1265 |
| And Arts and Wealth succeed (the secret spoils of Peace.) | |
| Tis said the Doves repented, tho too late | |
| Become the Smiths of their own Foolish Fate: | |
| Nor did their Owner hasten their ill hour: | |
| But, sunk in Credit, they decreasd in Powr: | 1270 |
| Like Snows in warmth that mildly pass away, | |
| Dissolving in the Silence of Decay. | |
| The Buzzard, not content with equal place, | |
| Invites the featherd Nimrods of his Race, | |
| To hide the thinness of their Flock from Sight, | 1275 |
| And all together make a seeming, goodly Flight: | |
| But each have seprate Interests of their own; | |
| Two Czars, are one too many for a throne. | |
| Nor can th usurper long abstain from Food, | |
| Already he has tasted Pigeons Blood: | 1280 |
| And may be tempted to his former fare, | |
| When this Indulgent Lord shall late to Heavn repair. | |
| Bare benting times, and moulting Months may come, | |
| When lagging late, they cannot reach their home: | |
| Or Rent in schism, (for so their Fate decrees,) | 1285 |
| Like the Tumultuous Colledge of the Bees; | |
| They fight their Quarrel, by themselves opprest; | |
| The Tyrant smiles below, and waits the falling feast. | |
| Thus did the gentle Hind her fable end, | |
| Nor would the Panther blame it, nor commend; | 1290 |
| But, with affected Yawnings at the close, | |
| Seemd to require her natural repose. | |
| For now the streaky light began to peep; | |
| And setting stars admonishd both to sleep. | |
| The Dame withdrew, and wishing to her Guest | 1295 |
| The peace of Heavn, betook her self to rest. | |
| Ten thousand Angels on her slumbers waite | |
With glorious Visions of her future state.
FINIS. | |