The Poems of Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
PREFACE
The works of Jonathan Swift in prose and verse so mutually
illustrate each other, that it was deemed indispensable, as a
complement to the standard edition of the Prose Works, to issue a
revised edition of the Poems, freed from the errors which had been
allowed to creep into the text, and illustrated with fuller
explanatory notes. My first care, therefore, in preparing the Poems
for publication, was to collate them with the earliest and best
editions available, and this I have done.
But, thanks to the diligence of the late John Forster, to
whom every lover of Swift must confess the very greatest
obligation, I have been able to do much more. I have been able to
enrich this edition with some pieces not hitherto brought to
light—notably, the original version of "Baucis and Philemon," in
addition to the version hitherto printed; the original version of
the poem on "Vanbrugh's House"; the verses entitled "May Fair"; and
numerous variations and corrections of the texts of nearly all the
principal poems, due to Forster's collation of them with the
transcripts made by Stella, which were found by him at Narford
formerly the seat of Swift's friend, Sir Andrew Fountaine—see
Forster's "Life of Swift," of which, unfortunately, he lived to
publish only the first volume. From Swift's own copy of the
"Miscellanies in Prose and Verse," 1727-32, with notes in his own
handwriting, sold at auction last year, I was able to make several
corrections of the poems contained in those four volumes, which
serve to show how Swift laboured his works, and revised and
improved them whenever he had an opportunity of doing so. It is a
mistake to suppose that he was indifferent to literary fame: on the
contrary, he kept some of his works in manuscript for years in
order to perfect them for publication, of which "The Tale of a
Tub," "Gulliver's Travels," and the "Verses on his own Death" are
examples.
I am indebted to Miss Wilmot-Chetwode, of Wordbrooke, for the
loan of a manuscript volume, from which I obtained some various
readings. By the advice of Mr. Elrington Ball, I applied to the
librarians of Trinity College and of the National Library, and from
the latter I received a number of pieces; but I found that the
harvest had already been reaped so fully, that there was nothing
left to glean which could with certainty be ascribed to Swift. On
the whole, I believe that this edition of the Poems will be found
as complete as it is now possible to make it.
In the arrangement of the poems, I have adopted nearly the
same order as in the Aldine edition, for the pieces seem to fall
naturally into those divisions; but with this difference, that I
have placed the pieces in their chronological order in each
division. With regard to the notes in illustration of the text,
many of them in the Dublin editions were evidently written by
Swift, especially the notes to the "Verses on his own Death." And
as to the notes of previous editors, I have retained them so far as
they were useful and correct: but to many of them I have made
additions or alterations wherever, on reference to the authorities
cited, or to other works, correction became necessary. For my own
notes, I can only say that I have sought to make them concise,
appropriate to the text, and, above all, accurate.
Swift and the educated men of his time thought in the
classics, and his poems, as well as those of his friends, abound
with allusions to the Greek and Roman authors, especially to the
latter. I have given all the references, and except in the
imitations and paraphrases of so familiar a writer as Horace, I
have appended the Latin text. Moreover, Swift was, like Sterne,
very fond of curious and recondite reading, in which it is not
always easy to track him without some research; but I believe that
I have not failed to illustrate any matter that required
elucidation.
W. E. B.
INTRODUCTION
Dr. Johnson, in his "Life of Swift," after citing with
approval Delany's character of him, as he describes him to Lord
Orrery, proceeds to say: "In the poetical works there is not much
upon which the critic can exercise his powers. They are often
humorous, almost always light, and have the qualities which
recommend such compositions, easiness and gaiety. They are, for the
most part, what their author intended. The diction is correct, the
numbers are smooth, and the rhymes exact. There seldom occurs a
hard laboured expression or a redundant epithet; all his verses
exemplify his own definition of a good style—they consist of
'proper words in proper places.'"
Of his earliest poems it is needless to say more than that if
nothing better had been written by him than those Pindaric Pieces,
after the manner of Cowley—then so much in vogue—the remark of
Dryden, "Cousin Swift, you will never be a Poet," would have been
fully justified. But conventional praise and compliments were
foreign to his nature, for his strongest characteristic was his
intense sincerity. He says of himself that about that time he had
writ and burnt and writ again upon all manner of subjects more than
perhaps any man in England; and it is certainly remarkable that in
so doing his true genius was not sooner developed, for it was not
till he became chaplain in Lord Berkeley's household that his
satirical humour was first displayed—at least in verse—in "Mrs.
Frances Harris' Petition."—His great prose satires, "The Tale of a
Tub," and "Gulliver's Travels," though planned, were reserved to a
later time.—In other forms of poetry he soon afterwards greatly
excelled, and the title of poet cannot be refused to the author of
"Baucis and Philemon"; the verses on "The Death of Dr. Swift"; the
"Rhapsody on Poetry"; "Cadenus and Vanessa"; "The Legion Club"; and
most of the poems addressed to Stella, all of which pieces exhibit
harmony, invention, and imagination.
Swift has been unduly censured for the coarseness of his
language upon Certain topics; but very little of this appears in
his earlier poems, and what there is, was in accordance with the
taste of the period, which never hesitated to call a spade a spade,
due in part to the reaction from the Puritanism of the preceding
age, and in part to the outspeaking frankness which disdained
hypocrisy. It is shown in Dryden, Pope, Prior, of the last of whom
Johnson said that no lady objected to have his poems in her
library; still more in the dramatists of that time, whom Charles
Lamb has so humorously defended, and in the plays of Mrs. Aphra
Behn, who, as Pope says, "fairly puts all characters to bed." But
whatever coarseness there may be in some of Swift's poems, such as
"The Lady's Dressing Room," and a few other pieces, there is
nothing licentious, nothing which excites to lewdness; on the
contrary, such pieces create simply a feeling of repulsion. No one,
after reading the "Beautiful young Nymph going to bed," or
"Strephon and Chloe," would desire any personal acquaintance with
the ladies, but there is a moral in these pieces, and the latter
poem concludes with excellent matrimonial advice. The coarseness of
some of his later writings must be ascribed to his misanthropical
hatred of the "animal called man," as expressed in his famous
letter to Pope of September 1725, aggravated as it was by his exile
from the friends he loved to a land he hated, and by the reception
he met with there, about which he speaks very freely in his notes
to the "Verses on his own Death."
On the morning of Swift's installation as Dean, the following
scurrilous lines by Smedley, Dean of Clogher, were affixed to the
doors of St. Patrick's Cathedral:
To-day this Temple gets a Dean
Of parts and fame uncommon,
Us'd both to pray and to prophane,
To serve both God and mammon.
When Wharton reign'd a Whig he was;
When Pembroke—that's dispute, Sir;
In Oxford's time, what Oxford pleased,
Non-con, or Jack, or Neuter.
This place he got by wit and rhime,
And many ways most odd,
And might a Bishop be in time,
Did he believe in God.
Look down, St. Patrick, look, we pray,
On thine own church and steeple;
Convert thy Dean on this great day,
Or else God help the people.
And now, whene'er his Deanship dies,
Upon his stone be graven,
A man of God here buried lies,
Who never thought of heaven.
It was by these lines that Smedley earned for himself a niche
in "The Dunciad." For Swift's retaliation, see the poems relating
to Smedley at the end of the first volume, and in volume ii, at p.
124, note.
This bitterness of spirit reached its height in "Gulliver's
Travels," surely the severest of all satires upon humanity, and
writ, as he tells us, not to divert, but to vex the world; and
ultimately, in the fierce attack upon the Irish Parliament in the
poem entitled "The Legion Club," dictated by his hatred of tyranny
and oppression, and his consequent passion for exhibiting human
nature in its most degraded aspect.
But, notwithstanding his misanthropical feelings towards
mankind in general, and his "scorn of fools by fools mistook for
pride," there never existed a warmer or sincerer friend to those
whom he loved—witness the regard in which he was held by Oxford,
Bolingbroke, Pope, Gay, Arbuthnot, and Congreve, and his readiness
to assist those who needed his help, without thought of party or
politics. Although, in some of his poems, Swift rather severely
exposed the follies and frailties of the fair sex, as in "The
Furniture of a Woman's Mind," and "The Journal of a Modern Lady,"
he loved the companionship of beautiful and accomplished women,
amongst whom he could count some of his dearest and truest friends;
but He loved to be bitter at A lady illiterate; and therefore
delighted in giving them literary instruction, most notably in the
cases of Stella and Vanessa, whose relations with him arose
entirely from the tuition in letters which they received from him.
Again, when on a visit at Sir Arthur Acheson's, he insisted upon
making Lady Acheson read such books as he thought fit to advise,
and in the doggerel verses entitled "My Lady's Lamentation," she is
supposed to resent his "very imperious" manner of
instruction:
No book for delight
Must come in my sight;
But instead of new plays,
Dull Bacon's Essays,
And pore every day on
That nasty Pantheon.
As a contrast to his imperiousness, there is an affectionate
simplicity in the fancy names he used to bestow upon his female
friends. Sir William Temple's wife, Dorothea, became Dorinda;
Esther Johnson, Stella; Hester Vanhomrigh, Vanessa; Lady
Winchelsea, Ardelia; while to Lady Acheson he gave the nicknames of
Skinnybonia, Snipe, and Lean. But all was taken by them in good
part; for his rather dictatorial ways were softened by the
fascinating geniality and humour which he knew so well how to
employ when he used to "deafen them with puns and
rhyme."
Into the vexed question of the relations between Swift and
Stella I do not purpose to enter further than to record my
conviction that she was never more to him than "the dearest friend
that ever man had." The suggestion of a concealed marriage is so
inconsistent with their whole conduct to each other from first to
last, that if there had been such a marriage, instead of Swift
having been, as he was, a man of intense
sincerity , he must be held to have been a most
consummate hypocrite. In my opinion, Churton Collins settled this
question in his essays on Swift, first published in the "Quarterly
Review," 1881 and 1882. Swift's relation with Vanessa is the
saddest episode in his life. The story is amply told in his poem,
"Cadenus and Vanessa," and in the letters which passed between
them: how the pupil became infatuated with her tutor; how the tutor
endeavoured to dispel her passion, but in vain, by reason; and how,
at last, she died from love for the man who was unable to give love
in return. That Swift ought, as soon as Hester disclosed her
passion for him, at once to have broken off the intimacy, must be
conceded; but how many men possessed of his kindness of heart would
have had the courage to have acted otherwise than he did? Swift
seems, in fact, to have been constitutionally incapable of
the passion of love, for he
says, himself, that he had never met the woman he wished to marry.
His annual tributes to Stella on her birthdays express the
strongest regard and esteem, but he "ne'er admitted love a guest,"
and he had been so long used to this Platonic affection, that he
had come to regard women as friends, but never as lovers. Stella,
on her part, had the same feeling, for she never expressed the
least discontent at her position, or ever regarded Swift otherwise
than as her tutor, her counsellor, her friend. In her verses to him
on his birthday, 1721, she says:
Long be the day that gave you birth
Sacred to friendship, wit, and mirth;
Late dying may you cast a shred
Of your rich mantle o'er my head;
To bear with dignity my sorrow
One day alone, then die tomorrow.
Stella naturally expected to survive Swift, but it was not to
be. She died in the evening of the 28th January 1727-8; and on the
same night he began the affecting piece, "On the Death of Mrs.
Johnson." (See "Prose Works," vol. xi.)
With the death of Stella, Swift's real happiness ended, and
he became more and more possessed by the melancholy which too often
accompanies the broadest humour, and which, in his case, was
constitutional. It was, no doubt, to relieve it, that he resorted
to the composition of the doggerel verses, epigrams, riddles, and
trifles exchanged betwixt himself and Sheridan, which induced
Orrery's remark that "Swift composing Riddles is Titian painting
draught-boards;" on which Delany observes that "a Riddle may be as
fine painting as any other in the world. It requires as strong an
imagination, as fine colouring, and as exact a proportion and
keeping as any other historical painting"; and he instances "Pethox
the Great," and should also have alluded to the more learned
example—"Louisa to Strephon."
On Orrery's seventh Letter, Delany says that if some of the
"coin is base," it is the fine impression and polish which adds
value to it, and cites the saying of another nobleman, that "there
is indeed some stuff in it, but it is Swift's stuff." It has been
said that Swift has never taken a thought from any writer ancient
or modern. This is not literally true, but the instances are not
many, and in my notes I have pointed out the lines snatched from
Milton, Denham, Butler—the last evidently a great
favourite.
It seems necessary to state shortly the causes of Swift not
having obtained higher preferment. Besides that Queen Anne would
never be reconciled to the author of the "Tale of a Tub"—the true
purport of which was so ill-understood by her—he made an
irreconcilable enemy of her friend, the Duchess of Somerset, by his
lampoon entitled "The Windsor Prophecy." But Swift seldom allowed
prudence to restrain his wit and humour, and admits of himself that
he "had too much satire in his vein"; and that "a genius in the
reverend gown must ever keep its owner down"; and says
further:
Humour and mirth had place in all he writ;
He reconciled divinity and wit.
But that was what his enemies could not do.
Whatever the excellences and defects of the poems, Swift has
erected, not only by his works, but by his benevolence and his
charities, a monumentum aere
perennius, and his writings in prose and verse
will continue to afford instruction and delight when the
malevolence of Jeffrey, the misrepresentations of Macaulay, and the
sneers and false statements of Thackeray shall have been
forgotten.
ODE TO DOCTOR WILLIAM SANCROFT[1]
LATE LORD BISHOP OF
CANTERBURY
WRITTEN IN MAY, 1689, AT THE DESIRE OF THE LATE LORD
BISHOP OF ELY
I
Truth is eternal, and the Son of Heaven,
Bright effluence of th'immortal
ray,
Chief cherub, and chief lamp, of that high sacred
Seven,
Which guard the throne by night, and are its light by
day;
First of God's darling
attributes,
Thou daily seest him face to
face,
Nor does thy essence fix'd depend on giddy
circumstance
Of time or place,
Two foolish guides in every sublunary dance;
How shall we find Thee then in dark
disputes?
How shall we search Thee in a battle
gain'd,
Or a weak argument by force
maintain'd?
In dagger contests, and th'artillery of words,
(For swords are madmen's tongues, and tongues are madmen's
swords,)
Contrived to tire all patience
out,
And not to satisfy the
doubt?
II
But where is even thy Image on our
earth?
For of the person much I
fear,
Since Heaven will claim its residence, as well as
birth,
And God himself has said, He shall not find it
here.
For this inferior world is but Heaven's dusky
shade,
By dark reverted rays from its reflection made;
Whence the weak shapes wild and imperfect
pass,
Like sunbeams shot at too far distance from a
glass;
Which all the mimic
forms express,
Though in strange uncouth postures, and uncomely
dress;
So when Cartesian artists
try
To solve appearances of sight
In its reception to the
eye,
And catch the living landscape through a scanty
light,
The figures all inverted
show,
And colours of a faded
hue;
Here a pale shape with upward footstep
treads,
And men seem walking on their
heads;
There whole herds suspended
lie,
Ready to tumble down into the sky;
Such are the ways ill-guided mortals
go
To judge of things above by things
below.
Disjointing shapes as in the fairy land of
dreams,
Or images that sink in streams;
No wonder, then, we talk amiss
Of truth, and what, or where it is;
Say, Muse, for thou, if any,
know'st,
Since the bright essence fled, where haunts the reverend
ghost?
III
If all that our weak knowledge titles virtue, be
(High Truth) the best resemblance of exalted
Thee,
If a mind fix'd to combat
fate
With those two powerful swords, submission and
humility,
Sounds truly good, or truly
great;
Ill may I live, if the good Sancroft, in his holy
rest,
In the divinity of
retreat,
Be not the brightest pattern earth can
show
Of heaven-born Truth
below;
But foolish man still judges what is
best
In his own balance, false and
light,
Following opinion, dark and
blind,
That vagrant leader of the
mind,
Till honesty and conscience are clear out of
sight.
IV
And some, to be large ciphers in a state,
Pleased with an empty swelling to be counted
great,
Make their minds travel o'er infinity of space,
Rapt through the wide expanse of
thought,
And oft in contradiction's vortex
caught,
To keep that worthless clod, the body, in one
place;
Errors like this did old astronomers misguide,
Led blindly on by gross philosophy and pride,
Who, like hard masters, taught the
sun
Through many a heedless sphere to
run,
Many an eccentric and unthrifty motion make,
And thousand incoherent journeys
take,
Whilst all th'advantage by it
got,
Was but to light earth's
inconsiderable spot.
The herd beneath, who see the weathercock of
state
Hung loosely on the church's
pinnacle,
Believe it firm, because perhaps the day is mild and
still;
But when they find it turn with the first blast of
fate,
By gazing upward giddy
grow,
And think the church itself does
so;
Thus fools, for being strong and num'rous
known,
Suppose the truth, like all the world, their
own;
And holy Sancroft's motion quite irregular
appears,
Because 'tis opposite to
theirs.
V
In vain then would the Muse the multitude
advise,
Whose peevish knowledge thus perversely
lies
In gath'ring follies from the
wise;
Rather put on thy anger and thy
spite,
And some kind power for once
dispense
Through the dark mass, the dawn of so much
sense,
To make them understand, and feel me when I
write;
The muse and I no more revenge
desire,
Each line shall stab, shall blast, like daggers and like
fire;
Ah, Britain, land of angels! which of all thy
sins,
(Say, hapless isle,
although
It is a bloody list we
know,)
Has given thee up a dwelling-place to fiends?
Sin and the plague ever
abound
In governments too easy, and too fruitful
ground;
Evils which a too gentle
king,
Too flourishing a
spring,
And too warm summers
bring:
Our British soil is over rank, and
breeds
Among the noblest flowers a thousand
pois'nous weeds,
And every stinking weed so lofty
grows,
As if 'twould overshade the Royal
Rose;
The Royal Rose, the glory of our
morn,
But, ah! too much without
a thorn.
VI
Forgive (original mildness) this ill-govern'd
zeal,
'Tis all the angry slighted Muse can do
In the pollution of these
days;
No province now is left her but to
rail,
And poetry has lost the art to
praise,
Alas, the occasions are so
few:
None e'er but you,
And your Almighty Master,
knew
With heavenly peace of mind to bear
(Free from our tyrant passions, anger, scorn, or
fear)
The giddy turns of popular rage,
And all the contradictions of a poison'd age;
The Son of God pronounced by the same
breath
Which straight pronounced his
death;
And though I should but ill be
understood,
In wholly equalling our sin and
theirs,
And measuring by the scanty thread of
wit
What we call holy, and great, and just, and
good,
(Methods in talk whereof our pride and ignorance make
use,)
And which our wild ambition foolishly
compares
With endless and with
infinite;
Yet pardon, native Albion, when I
say,
Among thy stubborn sons there haunts that spirit of the
Jews,
That those forsaken wretches who
to-day
Revile his great
ambassador,
Seem to discover what they would have
done
(Were his humanity on earth once
more)
To his undoubted Master, Heaven's Almighty Son.
VII
But zeal is weak and ignorant, though wondrous
proud,
Though very turbulent and very loud;
The crazy composition
shows,
Like that fantastic medley in the idol's toes,
Made up of iron mixt with clay,
This crumbles into dust,
That moulders into rust,
Or melts by the first shower away.
Nothing is fix'd that mortals see or know,
Unless, perhaps, some stars above be so;
And those, alas, do
show,
Like all transcendent excellence
below;
In both, false mediums cheat our
sight,
And far exalted objects lessen by their height:
Thus primitive Sancroft moves too
high
To be observed by vulgar
eye,
And rolls the silent
year
On his own secret regular
sphere,
And sheds, though all unseen, his sacred influence
here.
VIII
Kind star, still may'st thou shed thy sacred influence
here,
Or from thy private peaceful orb
appear;
For, sure, we want some guide from Heaven, to
show
The way which every wand'ring fool
below
Pretends so perfectly to
know;
And which, for aught I see, and much I
fear,
The world has wholly
miss'd;
I mean the way which leads to
Christ:
Mistaken idiots! see how giddily they run,
Led blindly on by avarice and pride,
What mighty numbers follow
them;
Each fond of erring with his
guide:
Some whom ambition drives, seek Heaven's high
Son
In Caesar's court, or in Jerusalem:
Others, ignorantly wise,
Among proud doctors and disputing Pharisees:
What could the sages gain but unbelieving scorn;
Their faith was so uncourtly, when they
said
That Heaven's high Son was in a village born;
That the world's Saviour had
been
In a vile manger laid,
And foster'd in a wretched
inn?
IX
Necessity, thou tyrant conscience of the great,
Say, why the church is still led blindfold by the
state;
Why should the first be ruin'd and laid
waste,
To mend dilapidations in the last?
And yet the world, whose eyes are on our mighty
Prince,
Thinks Heaven has cancell'd all our
sins,
And that his subjects share his happy influence;
Follow the model close, for so I'm sure they
should,
But wicked kings draw more examples than the
good:
And divine Sancroft, weary with the
weight
Of a declining church, by faction, her worst foe,
oppress'd,
Finding the mitre almost
grown
A load as heavy as the
crown,
Wisely retreated to his heavenly
rest.
X
Ah! may no unkind earthquake of the
state,
Nor hurricano from the
crown,
Disturb the present mitre, as that fearful storm of
late,
Which, in its dusky march along the
plain,
Swept up whole churches as it
list,
Wrapp'd in a whirlwind and a
mist;
Like that prophetic tempest in the virgin reign,
And swallow'd them at last, or flung them
down.
Such were the storms good Sancroft long has
borne;
The mitre, which his sacred head has
worn,
Was, like his Master's Crown, inwreath'd with
thorn.
Death's sting is swallow'd up in victory at
last,
The bitter cup is from him
past:
Fortune in both extremes
Though blasts from contrariety of
winds,
Yet to firm heavenly
minds,
Is but one thing under two different names;
And even the sharpest eye that has the prospect
seen,
Confesses ignorance to judge
between;
And must to human reasoning opposite conclude,
To point out which is moderation, which is
fortitude.
XI
Thus Sancroft, in the exaltation of retreat,
Shows lustre that was shaded in his
seat;
Short glimm'rings of the prelate
glorified;
Which the disguise of greatness only served to
hide.
Why should the Sun, alas! be
proud
To lodge behind a golden
cloud?
Though fringed with evening gold the cloud appears so
gay,
'Tis but a low-born vapour kindled by a ray:
At length 'tis overblown and
past,
Puff'd by the people's spiteful
blast,
The dazzling glory dims their prostituted sight,
No deflower'd eye can face the naked
light:
Yet does this high perfection well
proceed
From strength of its own native
seed,
This wilderness, the world, like that poetic wood of
old,
Bears one, and but one branch of
gold,
Where the bless'd spirit lodges like the
dove,
And which (to heavenly soil transplanted) will
improve,
To be, as 'twas below, the brightest plant
above;
For, whate'er theologic levellers
dream,
There are degrees above, I
know,
As well as here below,
(The goddess Muse herself has told me
so),
Where high patrician souls, dress'd heavenly
gay,
Sit clad in lawn of purer woven day.
There some high-spirited throne to Sancroft shall be
given,
In the metropolis of
Heaven;
Chief of the mitred saints, and from archprelate
here,
Translated to archangel
there.
XII
Since, happy saint, since it has been of late
Either our blindness or our fate,
To lose the providence of thy cares
Pity a miserable church's tears,
That begs the powerful blessing of thy
prayers.
Some angel, say, what were the nation's
crimes,
That sent these wild reformers to our
times:
Say what their senseless malice
meant,
To tear religion's lovely
face:
Strip her of every ornament and
grace;
In striving to wash off th'imaginary paint?
Religion now does on her death-bed
lie,
Heart-sick of a high fever and consuming
atrophy;
How the physicians swarm to show their mortal
skill,
And by their college arts methodically kill:
Reformers and physicians differ but in name,
One end in both, and the design the
same;
Cordials are in their talk, while all they mean
Is but the patient's death, and
gain—
Check in thy satire, angry Muse,
Or a more worthy subject choose:
Let not the outcasts of an outcast age
Provoke the honour of my Muse's rage,
Nor be thy mighty spirit rais'd,
Since Heaven and Cato both are
pleas'd—
[The rest of the poem is lost.]
[Footnote 1: Born Jan., 1616-17; died 1693. For his life, see
"Dictionary of National Biography."— W. E.
B. ]
ODE TO THE HON. SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE
WRITTEN AT MOOR-PARK IN JUNE 1689
I
Virtue, the greatest of all monarchies!
Till its first emperor,
rebellious man,
Deposed from off his
seat,
It fell, and broke with its own
weight
Into small states and principalities,
By many a petty lord
possess'd,
But ne'er since seated in one single breast.
'Tis you who must this
land subdue,
The mighty conquest's
left for you,
The conquest and
discovery too:
Search out this Utopian
ground,
Virtue's Terra
Incognita,
Where none ever led the
way,
Nor ever since but in descriptions found;
Like the philosopher's
stone,
With rules to search it, yet obtain'd by none.
II
We have too long been led
astray;
Too long have our misguided souls been taught
With rules from musty
morals brought,
'Tis you must put us in
the way;
Let us (for shame!) no
more be fed
With antique relics of
the dead,
The gleanings of
philosophy;
Philosophy, the lumber of the
schools,
The roguery of alchymy;
And we, the bubbled
fools,
Spend all our present life, in hopes of golden
rules.
III
But what does our proud ignorance Learning call?
We oddly Plato's paradox make
good,
Our knowledge is but mere remembrance all;
Remembrance is our treasure and our food;
Nature's fair table-book, our tender souls,
We scrawl all o'er with old and empty rules,
Stale memorandums of the
schools:
For learning's mighty treasures
look
Into that deep grave, a
book;
Think that she there does all her treasures
hide,
And that her troubled ghost still haunts there since she
died;
Confine her walks to colleges and schools;
Her priests, her train, and
followers, show
As if they all were spectres
too!
They purchase knowledge at
th'expense
Of common breeding, common
sense,
And grow at once scholars and
fools;
Affect ill-manner'd
pedantry,
Rudeness, ill-nature, incivility,
And, sick with dregs and knowledge
grown,
Which greedily they swallow
down,
Still cast it up, and nauseate company.
IV
Curst be the wretch! nay, doubly
curst!
(If it may lawful
be
To curse our greatest
enemy,)
Who learn'd himself that heresy
first,
(Which since has seized on all the
rest,)
That knowledge forfeits all humanity;
Taught us, like Spaniards, to be proud and poor,
And fling our scraps before our
door!
Thrice happy you have 'scaped this general pest;
Those mighty epithets, learned, good, and great,
Which we ne'er join'd before, but in romances
meet,
We find in you at last united grown.
You cannot be compared to
one:
I must, like him that painted Venus'
face,
Borrow from every one a
grace;
Virgil and Epicurus will not do,
Their courting a retreat
like you,
Unless I put in Caesar's learning too:
Your happy frame at once
controls
This great triumvirate of
souls.
V
Let not old Rome boast Fabius' fate;
He sav'd his country by
delays,
But you by
peace.[1]
You bought it at a cheaper
rate;
Nor has it left the usual bloody scar,
To show it cost its price
in war;
War, that mad game the world so loves to play,
And for it does so dearly
pay;
For, though with loss, or victory, a while
Fortune the gamesters
does beguile,
Yet at the last the box sweeps all away.
VI
Only the laurel got by
peace
No thunder
e'er can blast:
Th'artillery of the
skies
Shoots to the
earth and dies:
And ever green and flourishing 'twill last,
Nor dipt in blood, nor widows' tears, nor orphans'
cries.
About the head crown'd
with these bays,
Like lambent fire, the
lightning plays;
Nor, its triumphal cavalcade to grace,
Makes up its solemn train with
death;
It melts the sword of war, yet keeps it in the
sheath.
VII
The wily shafts of state, those jugglers'
tricks,
Which we call deep designs and politics,
(As in a theatre the ignorant fry,
Because the cords escape their
eye,
Wonder to see the motions
fly,)
Methinks, when you expose the
scene,
Down the ill-organ'd engines
fall;
Off fly the vizards, and discover all:
How plain I see through
the deceit!
How shallow, and how
gross, the cheat!
Look where the pulley's tied above!
Great God! (said I) what have I
seen!
On what poor engines
move
The thoughts of monarchs and designs of states!
What petty motives rule their fates!
How the mouse makes the mighty mountains shake!
The mighty mountain labours with its birth,
Away the frighten'd peasants fly,
Scared at the unheard-of prodigy,
Expect some great gigantic son of earth;
Lo! it
appears!
See how they tremble! how they
quake!
Out starts the little beast, and mocks their idle
fears.
VIII
Then tell, dear favourite Muse!
What serpent's that which still
resorts,
Still lurks in palaces and courts?
Take thy unwonted
flight,
And on the terrace
light.
See where she
lies!
See how she rears her
head,
And rolls about her dreadful
eyes,
To drive all virtue out, or look it dead!
'Twas sure this basilisk sent Temple thence,
And though as some ('tis said) for their defence
Have worn a casement o'er their
skin,
So wore he his
within,
Made up of virtue and transparent innocence;
And though he oft renew'd the
fight,
And almost got priority of sight,
He ne'er could overcome her
quite,
In pieces cut, the viper still did reunite;
Till, at last, tired with loss of
time and ease,
Resolved to give himself, as well as country,
peace.
IX
Sing, beloved Muse! the pleasures of retreat,
And in some untouch'd virgin strain,
Show the delights thy sister Nature yields;
Sing of thy vales, sing of thy woods, sing of thy
fields;
Go, publish
o'er the plain
How mighty a proselyte you
gain!
How noble a reprisal on the great!
How is the Muse luxuriant
grown!
Whene'er she
takes this flight,
She soars
clear out of sight.
These are the paradises of her own:
Thy Pegasus, like an
unruly horse,
Though ne'er
so gently led,
To the loved pastures where he used to feed,
Runs violent o'er his usual course.
Wake from thy wanton
dreams,
Come from thy dear-loved
streams,
The crooked paths of wandering
Thames.
Fain the fair
nymph would stay,
Oft she looks back in
vain,
Oft 'gainst her fountain does
complain,
And softly steals in many
windings down,
As loth to see the hated
court and town;
And murmurs as she glides away.
X
In this new happy scene
Are nobler subjects for your learned
pen;
Here we expect from you
More than your predecessor Adam knew;
Whatever moves our wonder, or our sport,
Whatever serves for innocent emblems of the
court;
How that which we a kernel
see,
(Whose well-compacted forms escape the light,
Unpierced by the blunt rays of
sight,)
Shall ere long grow into a
tree;
Whence takes it its increase, and whence its
birth,
Or from the sun, or from the air, or from the
earth,
Where all the fruitful atoms
lie;
How some go downward to the root,
Some more ambitious upwards
fly,
And form the leaves, the branches, and the
fruit.
You strove to cultivate a barren court in vain,
Your garden's better worth your nobler pain,
Here mankind fell, and hence must rise again.
XI
Shall I believe a spirit so divine
Was cast in the same
mould with mine?
Why then does Nature so unjustly share
Among her elder sons the whole estate,
And all her jewels and
her plate?
Poor we! cadets of Heaven, not worth her care,
Take up at best with lumber and the leavings of a
fare:
Some she binds 'prentice
to the spade,
Some to the drudgery of a
trade:
Some she does to Egyptian bondage draw,
Bids us make bricks, yet sends us to look out for
straw:
Some she condemns for
life to try
To dig the leaden mines of deep philosophy:
Me she has to the Muse's galleys tied:
In vain I strive to cross the spacious main,
In vain I tug and pull the
oar;
And when I almost reach the
shore,
Straight the Muse turns the helm, and I launch out
again:
And yet, to feed my
pride,
Whene'er I mourn, stops my complaining breath,
With promise of a mad reversion after death.
XII
Then, Sir, accept this worthless verse,
The tribute of an humble Muse,
'Tis all the portion of my niggard stars;
Nature the hidden spark did at my birth
infuse,
And kindled first with indolence and ease;
And since too oft debauch'd by
praise,
'Tis now grown an incurable disease:
In vain to quench this foolish fire I try
In wisdom and
philosophy:
In vain all wholesome herbs I
sow,
Where nought but weeds
will grow
Whate'er I plant (like corn on barren earth)
By an equivocal
birth,
Seeds, and runs up to
poetry.
[Footnote 1: Sir William Temple was ambassador to the States
of Holland, and had a principal share in the negotiations which
preceded the treaty of Nimeguen, 1679.]
ODE TO KING WILLIAM
ON HIS SUCCESSES IN IRELAND
To purchase kingdoms and to buy renown,
Are arts peculiar to dissembling
France;
You, mighty monarch, nobler actions crown,
And solid virtue does your name
advance.
Your matchless courage with your prudence joins,
The glorious structure of your fame to
raise;
With its own light your dazzling glory shines,
And into adoration turns our praise.
Had you by dull succession gain'd your crown,
(Cowards are monarchs by that title
made,)
Part of your merit Chance would call her own,
And half your virtues had been lost in
shade.
But now your worth its just reward shall have:
What trophies and what triumphs are your
due!
Who could so well a dying nation save,
At once deserve a crown, and gain it
too.
You saw how near we were to ruin brought,
You saw th'impetuous torrent rolling
on;
And timely on the coming danger thought,
Which we could neither obviate nor
shun.
Britannia stripp'd of her sole guard, the laws,
Ready to fall Rome's bloody
sacrifice;
You straight stepp'd in, and from the monster's
jaws
Did bravely snatch the lovely, helpless
prize.
Nor this is all; as glorious is the care
To preserve conquests, as at first to
gain:
In this your virtue claims a double share,
Which, what it bravely won, does well
maintain.
Your arm has now your rightful title show'd,
An arm on which all Europe's hopes
depend,
To which they look as to some guardian God,
That must their doubtful liberty
defend.
Amazed, thy action at the Boyne we see!
When Schomberg started at the vast
design:
The boundless glory all redounds to thee,
The impulse, the fight, th'event, were wholly
thine.
The brave attempt does all our foes disarm;
You need but now give orders and
command,
Your name shall the remaining work perform,
And spare the labour of your conquering
hand.
France does in vain her feeble arts apply,
To interrupt the fortune of your
course:
Your influence does the vain attacks defy
Of secret malice, or of open force.
Boldly we hence the brave commencement date
Of glorious deeds, that must all tongues
employ;
William's the pledge and earnest given by fate,
Of England's glory, and her lasting
joy.
ODE TO THE ATHENIAN SOCIETY[1]