Complete Works of Matthew Prior

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Complete Works of Matthew Prior Page 28

by Matthew Prior


  Who does his mind in words reveal,

  Which all must grant, though few can spell.

  You tell your doctor that ye’re ill,

  And what does he but write a bill?

  Of which you need not read one letter:

  The worse the scrawl, the dose the better:

  For if you know but what you take,

  Though you recover, he must break.

  Ideas, farms, and intellects,

  Have furnish’d out three different sects.

  Substance or accident divides

  All Europe into adverse sides.

  Now, as engaged in arms or laws,

  You must have friends to back your cause,

  In philosophic matters so

  Your judgement must with others go:

  For as in senates so in schools,

  Majority of voices rules.

  Poor Alma, like a lonely deer,

  O’er hills and dales doth doubtful err:

  With panting haste and quick surprise,

  From every leaf that stirs she flies,

  Till, mingled with the neighbouring herd,

  She slights what erst she singly fear’d,

  And now exempt from doubt and dread,

  She dares pursue if they dare lead;

  As their example still prevails,

  She tempts the stream, or leaps the pales.

  He then, quoth Dick, who by your rule

  Thinks for himself becomes a fool;

  As party-man who leaves the rest,

  Is call’d but whimsical at best.

  Now, by your favour, Master Matt.

  Like Ralpho, here I smell a rat.

  I must be listed in your sect,

  Who, though they teach not, can protect.

  Right Richard, Matt, in triumph cried,

  So put off all mistrust and pride;

  And while my principles I beg,

  Pray answer only with your leg.

  Believe what friendly I advise:

  Be first secure, and then be wise.

  The man within the coach that sits,

  And to another’s skill submits,

  Is safer much, (whate’er arrives)

  And warmer too, than he that drives.

  So, Dick, adept, tuck back thy hair,

  And I will pour into thy ear

  Remarks which none did e’er disclose;

  In smooth paced verse, or hobbling prose.

  Attend, dear Dick, but don’t reply,

  And thou mayst prove as well as I.

  When Alma now in different ages

  Has finish’d her ascending stages,

  Into the head at length she gets,

  And there in public grandeur sits,

  To judge of things, and censure wits.

  Here, Richard, how could I explain

  The various labyrinths of the brain?

  Surprise my readers, whilst I tell ’em

  Of cerebrum and cerebellum?

  How could I play the commentator

  Where hot and cold, and dry and wet,

  Strive each the other’s place to get,

  And with incessant toil and strife

  Would keep possession during life?

  I could demonstrate every pore,

  Where Memory lays up all her store,

  And to an inch compute the station

  ‘Twixt judgement and imagination.

  O, Friend! I could display much learning,

  At least to men of small discerning.

  The brain contains ten thousand cells,

  In each some active fancy dwells,

  Which always is at work, and framing

  The several follies I was naming.

  As in a hive’s vimineous dome,

  Each does her studious action vary,

  To go and come, to fetch and carry;

  Each still renews her little labour,

  Nor jostles her assiduous neighbour:

  Each, Whilst this thesis I maintain,

  I fancy, Dick, I know thy brain.

  O, with the mighty theme affected,

  Could I but see thy head dissected?

  My head, quoth Dick, to serve your whim?

  Spare that, and take some other limb.

  Sir, in your nice affairs of system,

  Wise men, propose, but fools assist ’em.

  Says Matthew, Richard, keep thy head,

  And hold thy peace, and I’ll proceed.

  Proceed? quoth Dick, I do aver

  You have already gone too far.

  When people once are in the wrong,

  Each line they add is much too long.

  Who safest walks, but walks astray,

  Is only furthest from his way.

  Bless your conceits, must I believe,

  Howe’er absurd, what you conceive,

  And for your friendship live and die

  A Papist in philosophy?

  I say, whatever you maintain,

  Of Alma in the heart or brain,

  The plainest man alive may tell ye

  Her seat of empire is th belly;

  From hence she sends out those supplies

  Which make us either stout or wise:

  The strength of every other member

  Is founded on your belly timber:

  The qualms or raptures of your blood

  Rise in proportion to your food;

  And if your would improve your thought

  You must be fed as well as taught:

  You stomach makes your fabric roll,

  Just as the bias rules the bowl.

  That great Achilles might employ

  The strength design’d to ruin Troy,

  He dined on lion’s marrow, spread

  On toasts of ammunition-bread;

  But by his mother sent away

  Among the Thracian girls to play,

  Effeminate he sate, and quiet;

  Strange product of a cheesecake diet!

  Now give my argument fair play,

  And take the thing the other way,

  The youngster who at nine and three

  Drinks with his sisters milk and tea,

  From breakfast reads till twelve o’clock,

  Burnet and Heylin, Hobbes and Locke;

  He pays due visits after noon

  To Cousin Alive and Uncle John;

  At ten, from coffeehouse or play

  Returning, fishes of the day:

  But give him port and potent sack,

  From milksop he starts up Mohach;

  Holds that the happy know no hours;

  So through the street at midnight scours;

  Breaks watchmen’s heads and chairmen’s glasses,

  And thence proceeds to nicking sashes,

  Till by some tougher hand o’ercome,

  And first knock’d down, and then led home,

  He damns the footman, strikes the maid,

  And decently reels up to bed.

  Observe the various operations

  Of food and drink in several nations,

  Was ever Tartar fierce or cruel

  Upon the strength of watergruel?

  But who shall stand his rage and force,

  If first he rides, then eats his horse?

  Sallads, and eggs, and lighter fare,

  Tune the Italian spark’s guitar:

  And, if I take Don Congreve right,

  Pudding and beef made Britons fight.

  Tokay and coffee cause this work

  Between the German and the Turk;

  And both, as they provisions want,

  Chicane, avoid, retire, and faint.

  Hunger and thirst, or guns and swords,

  Give the same death in different words.

  To push this argument no further,

  To starve a man in law is murther.

  As in a watch’s fine machine

  Though many artful springs are seen,

  The added movements, which declare

  How ful
l the moon, how old the year,

  Derive their secondary power

  From that which simply points the hour:

  For though those gimcracks were away,

  (Quare would not swear, but Quare would say)

  However more reduced and plain,

  The watch would still a watch remain;

  But if the horal orbit ceases,

  The whole stands still or breaks to pieces;

  Is now no longer what it was,

  And you may e’en go sell the case.

  So if unprejudiced you scan

  The goings of this clockwork, Man,

  You find a hundred movements made

  By fine devices in his head;

  But ’tis the stomach’s solid stroke

  That tells his being what’s o’clock.

  If you take off his rhetoric trigger,

  He talks no more in mood and figure;

  Or, clog his mathematic wheel,

  His buildings fall, his ship stands still:

  Or, lastly, break his politic weight,

  His voice no longer rules the state:

  Yet if these finer whims were gone,

  Your clock, though plain, would still go on;

  But spoil the engine of digestion,

  And you entirely change the question.

  Alma’s affairs no power can mend;

  The jest, alas! is at an end:

  Soon cease all this worldly bustle,

  And you consign the corpse to Russel.

  Now make your Alma come or go,

  From leg to hand, from top to toe,

  Your system, without my addition,

  Is in a very sad condition.

  So Harlequin extoll’d his horse

  Fit for the war, or road, or course:

  His mouth was soft, his eye was good,

  His foot was sure as ever trod;

  One fault he had, a fault indeed;

  And what was that? the horse was dead.

  Dick, from these instances and fetches

  Thou mak’st of horses, clocks, and watches,

  Quoth Matt. to me thou seem’st to mean

  That Alma is a mere machine:

  That telling others what’s o’clock

  She knows not what herself has struck,

  But leaves to standers-by the trial

  Of what is mark’d upon her dial.

  Here hold; a blow, good Friend, quoth Dick

  And raised his voice exceeding quick,

  Fight fair Sir: what I never meant

  Don’t you infer. In argument

  Similes are like songs in love:

  They much describe, they nothing prove.

  Matt. who was here a little gravell’d,

  Toss’d up his nose, and would have cavill’d,

  But calling Hermes to his aid,

  Half pleased, half angry, thus he said:

  Where mind (’tis for the author’s fame)

  That Matthew call’d and Hermes came.

  In danger heroes, and in doubt,

  Poets find gods to help them out.

  Friend Richard, I begin to see

  That you and I can scarce agree,

  Observe how oddly you behave;

  The more I grant the more you crave:

  But, comrade, as I said just now,

  I should affirm and you allow.

  We system-makers can sustain

  The thesis which you grant was plain,

  And with remarks and comments teaze ye,

  In case the thing before was easy;

  But in a point obscure and dark

  We fight as Leibnitz did with Clarke;

  And when no reason we can show

  Why matters this or that way go,

  The shortest way the thing we try,

  And what we know not we deny;

  True to our own o’erbearing pride,

  And false to all the world beside.

  That old philosopher grew cross,

  Who could not tell what motion was:

  Because he walk’d against his will,

  He faced men down that he stood still.

  And he who reading on the heart

  (When all his quodlibets of art

  Could not expound its pulse and heat)

  Swore he had never felt it beat.

  Chrysippus, foil’d by Epicurus,

  Makes bold (Jove bless him!) to assure us,

  That all things which our mind can view

  May be at once both false and true;

  And Malbranche has an odd conceit

  As ever enter’d Frenchman’s pate:

  Says he, So little can our mind

  Of matter or of spirit find,

  That we by guess at least may gather

  Something which may be both or neither.

  Faith Dick I must conceive ’tis true

  (But this is only entre nous)

  That many knotty points there are

  Which all discuss but few can clear;

  As Nature slily had thought fit,

  For some by-ends to cross-bite wit:

  Circles to square and cubes to double

  Would give a man excessive trouble:

  The longitude uncertain roams

  In spite of Wh n and his bombs.

  What System Dick has right averr’d

  The cause why woman has no beard?

  Or why, as years our frame attack,

  Our hair grows white, our teeth grow black?

  In points like these we must agree

  Our barber knows as well as we:

  Yet still unable to explain,

  We must persist the best we can;

  With care our systems still renew,

  And prove things likely, though not true.

  I could, thou seest, in quaint dispute,

  By dint of logic, strike thee mute;

  With learned skill now push, now parry,

  From Darii to Bocardo vary,

  And never yield, or what is worst,

  Never conclude the point discoursed:

  Yet that you hic et nunc may know

  How much you to my candour owe,

  I’ll from the disputant descend,

  To show thee I assume the friend;

  I’ll take thy notion for my own,

  (So most philosophers have down)

  It makes my system more complete:

  Dick, can it have a nobler fate?

  Take what thou wilt, said Dick, dear Friend,

  But bring thy matters to an end.

  I find, quoth Matt. reproof is vain,

  Who first offend will first complain.

  Thou wishest I should make to shore,

  Yet still putt’st in thy thwarting oar.

  What I have told thee fifty times

  In prose, receive for once in rhymes.

  A huge fat man in country-fair,

  Or city-church, (no matter where)

  Labour’d and push’d amidst the crowd,

  Still bawling out extremely loud,

  Lord save us! why do people press!

  Another, marking his distress,

  Friendly replied; Plump gentleman,

  Get out as fast as e’er you can;

  Or cease to push or to exclaim;

  You make the very crowd you blame.

  Says Dick, Your moral does not need

  The least return, so e’en proceed:

  Your tale, howe’er applied, was short:

  So far at least I thank you for’t.

  Matt. took his thanks, and in a tone

  More magisterial thus went on.

  Now Alma settles in the head,

  As has before been sung or said:

  And here begins this farce of life;

  Enter Revenge, Ambition, Strife;

  Behold on both sides men advance,

  To form in earnest Bays’s dance.

  L’Avre, not using half his store,

  Still grumbles that he has no more;

/>   Strikes not the present tun, for fear

  The vintage should be bad next year,

  And eats to-day with inward sorrow,

  And dread of fancied want to-morrow.

  Abroad if the surtout you wear

  Repels the rigour of the air,

  Would you be warmer if at home

  You had the fabric and the loom?

  And if two boots keep out the weather

  What need you have two hides of leather?

  Could Pedro, think you, make no trial

  Of a sonata on his viol,

  Unless he had the total gut,

  Whence every string at first was cut?

  When Rarus shows you his Cartone,

  He always tells you with a groan

  Where two of that same hand were torn

  Long before you or he were born.

  Poor Vento’s mind so much is cross’d,

  For part of his Petronius lost,

  That he can never take the pains

  To understand what yet remains.

  What toil did honest Curio take,

  What strict inquiries did he make,

  To get one medal, wanting yet,

  And perfect all his Roman set?

  ’Tis found: and O his happy lot!

  ’Tis bought, lock’d up, and lies forgot:

  Of these no more you hear him speak;

  He now begins upon the Greek.

  These ranged and show’d, shall in their turns

  Remain obscure as in their urns.

  My copper lamps at any rate,

  For being true antique, I bought,

  Yet wisely melted down my plate,

  On modern models to be wrought:

  And trifles I alike pursue,

  Because they’re old, because they’re new.

  Dick, I have seen you with delight

  For Georgy makes a paper kite,

  And simple odes, too many, show ye

  My servile complaisance to Cloe.

  Parents and lovers are decreed

  By Nature fools, That’s brave indeed!

  Quoth Dick; such truths are worth receiving;

  Yet still Dick look’d as not believing.

  Now Alma, to divines and prose

  I leave thy frauds, and crimes, and woes,

  Nor think to-night of thy ill-nature,

  But of thy follies, idle creature,

  The turns of thy uncertain wing,

  And not the malice of thy sting.

  Thy pride of being great and wise

  I do but mention to despise;

  I view with anger and disdain

  How little gives thee joy or pain:

  A print, a bronze, a flower, a root,

  A shell, a butterfly, can do’t:

 

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