Thomas Hood- Collected Poetical Works

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Thomas Hood- Collected Poetical Works Page 55

by Thomas Hood


  ‘Ha! Saint Peter! Saint Mark!’

  Roar’d the Knight, frowning dark,

  With an oath that was awful and bitter —

  ‘A young Maid to his dish!

  Why, what more could he wish,

  If the Beast were High-Born, and a Ritter!

  ‘Now by this our good brand,

  And by this our Tight hand, —

  By the badge that is borne on our banners,

  If we can but once meet

  With the Monster’s retreat,

  We will teach him to poach on our Manors!’

  Quite content with this vow,

  With a scrape and a bow,

  The glad Peasants went home to their flagons,

  Where they tippled so deep,

  That each clown in his sleep —

  Dreamt of killing a legion of Dragons!

  Thus engaged, the bold Knight

  Soon prepared for the fight

  With the wily and scaly marauder;

  But ere battle began,

  Like a good Christian man,

  First he put all his household in order.

  ‘Double bolted and barr’d

  Let each gate have a guard’ —

  (Thus his rugged Lieutenant was bidden)

  ‘And be sure, without fault,

  No one enters the vault

  Where the Church’s gold vessels are hidden.

  ‘In the dark Oubliette,

  Let you Merchant forget

  That he e’er had a bark richly laden —

  And that desperate youth,

  Our own rival forsooth!

  Just indulge with a Kiss of the Maiden!

  ‘Crush the thumbs of the Jew

  With the vice and the screw,

  Till he tells where he buried his treasure;

  And deliver our word

  To you sullen caged Bird,

  That to-night she must sing for our pleasure!’

  Thereupon, cap-a-pee,

  As a Champion should be,

  With the bald-headed Peasant to guide him,

  On his War-horse he bounds,

  And then, whistling his hounds,

  Prances off to what fate may betide him! —

  Nor too long do they seek,

  Ere a horrible reek,

  Like the fumes from some villanous tavern,

  Sets the dogs on the snuff,

  For they scent well enough

  The foul Monster coil’d up in his cavern!

  Then alighting with speed

  From his terrified steed,

  Which he ties to a tree for the present,

  With his sword ready drawn,

  Strides the Ritter High-born,

  And along with him drags the scared Peasant!

  ‘O Sir Knight, good Sir Knight!

  I am near enough quite —

  I have shown you the Beast and his grotto:’ —

  But before he can reach

  Any farther in speech,

  He is stricken stone-dead by Sir Otto!

  Who withdrawing himself

  To a high rocky shelf, —

  Sees the Monster his tail disentangle

  From each tortuous coil,

  With a sudden turmoil,

  And rush forth the dead Peasant to mangle.

  With his terrible claws,

  And his horrible jaws, —

  He soon moulds the warm corse to a jelly;

  Which he quickly sucks in

  To his own wicked skin,

  And then sinks at full stretch on his belly.

  Then the Knight softly goes,

  On the tips of his toes,

  To the greedy and slumbering Savage,

  And with one hearty stroke

  Of his sword, and a poke,

  Kills the Beast that had made such a ravage.

  So, extended at length,

  Without motion or strength,

  That gorg’d Serpent they call the Constrictor,

  After dinner, while deep —

  In lethargical sleep,

  Falls a prey to his Hottentot victor.

  ‘’Twas too easy by half!’

  Said the Knight with a laugh;

  ‘But as nobody witness’d the slaughter,

  I will swear, knock and knock,

  By Saint Winifred’s clock,

  We were at it three hours and a quarter!’

  Then he chopped off the head

  Of the Monster, so dread, —

  Which he tied to his horse as a trophy;

  And, with Hounds, by the same

  Ragged path that he came,

  Home he jogg’d proud as Sultan or Sophy!

  Blessed Saints! what a rout

  When the news flew about,

  And the carcase was fetch’d in a waggon;

  What an outcry rose wild

  From man, woman, and child —

  ‘Live Sir Otto, who vanquish’d the Dragon!’ —

  All that night the thick walls

  Of the Knight’s feudal halls

  Rang with shouts for the wine-cup and flagon;

  Whilst the Vassals stood by,

  And repeated the cry —

  ‘Live Sir Otto, who vanquish’d the Dragon!’

  The next night, and the next,

  Still the fight was the text,

  ’Twas a theme for the Minstrels to brag on!

  And the Vassals’ hoarse throats

  Still re-echoed the notes —

  ‘Live Sir Otto, who vanquish’d the Dragon!’

  There was never such work

  Since the days of King Stork,

  When he lived with the Frogs at free quarters!

  Not to name the invites

  That were sent down of-nights,

  To the villagers’ wives and their daughters!

  It was feast upon feast,

  For good cheers never ceased,

  And a foray replenished the flagon;

  And the Vassals stood by,

  But more weak was the cry —

  ‘Live Sir Otto, who vanquish’d the Dragon!’

  Down again sank the sun,

  Nor were revels yet done —

  But as ev’ry mouth had a gag on,

  Though the Vassals stood round,

  Deuce a word or a sound

  Of ‘Sir Otto, who vanquish’d the Dragon!’ —

  There was feasting aloft,

  But, thro’ pillage so oft,

  Down below there was wailing and hunger;

  And affection ran cold;

  And the food of the old,

  It was wolfishly snatch’d by the younger!

  Mad with troubles so vast,

  Where’s the wonder at last

  If the Peasants quite alter’d their motto!

  And with one loud accord —

  Cried out ‘Would to the Lord,

  That the Dragon had vanquish’d Sir Otto!’

  OUR LADY’S CHAPEL

  A LEGEND OF COBLENZ

  Whoe’er has crossed the Mosel Bridge,

  And mounted by the fort of Kaiser Franz,

  Has seen, perchance,

  Just on the summit of St. Peter’s ridge,

  A little open Chapel to the right,

  Wherein the tapers aye are burning bright:

  So popular, indeed, this holy shrine,

  At least among the female population,

  By night, or at high noon, you see it shine,

  A very Missal for illumination!

  Yet, when you please, at morn or eve, go by

  All other Chapels, standing in the fields,

  Whose mouldy, wifeless, husbandry but yields

  Beans, peas, potatoes, mangel-wurzel, rye,

  And, lo! the Virgin, lonely, dark, and hush,

  Without the glimmer of a farthing rush!

  But on Saint Peter’s Hill

  The lights are burning, burning, burning still.

  In fact, it is a pretty retail trader />
  To furnish forth the candles ready made;

  And close beside the Chapel and the way,

  A chandler, at her stall, sits day by day,

  And sells, both long and short, the waxen tapers

  Smarten’d with tinsel-foil and tinted papers.

  To give of the mysterious truth an inkling,

  Those who in this bright Chapel breathe a prayer

  To ‘Unser Frow,’ and burn a taper there,

  Are said to get a husband in a twinkling:

  Just as she-glowworms, if it be not scandal,

  Catch partners with their matrimonial candle.

  How kind of blessed Saints in heav’n —

  Where none in marriage, we are told, are giv’n —

  To interfere below in making matches,

  And help old maidens to connubial catches!

  The truth is, that instead of looking smugly

  (At least, so whisper wags satirical)

  The votaries are all so old and ugly,

  No man could fall in love but by a miracle!

  However, that such waxen gifts and vows

  Are sometimes for the purpose efficacious,

  In helping to a spouse,

  Is vouch’d for by a story most veracious.

  A certain Woman, tho’ in name a wife,

  Yet doom’d to lonely life,

  Her truant husband having been away

  Nine years, two months, a week, and half a day, —

  ‘Without remembrances by words or deeds, —

  Began to think she had sufficient handle

  To talk of widowhood and burn her weeds,

  Of course with a wax-candle.

  Sick, single-handed with the world to grapple,

  Weary of solitude, and spleen, and vapours,

  Away she hurried to Our Lady’s Chapel,

  Full-handed with two tapers —

  And pray’d as she had never pray’d before,

  To be a bonâ fide wife once more. —

  ‘Oh holy Virgin! listen to my prayer!

  And for sweet mercy, and thy sex’s sake,

  Accept the vows and offerings I make —

  Others set up one light, but here’s a pair!’ —

  Her pray’r, it seem’d, was heard;

  For in three little weeks, exactly reckon’d,

  As blithe as any bird,

  She stood before the Priest with Hans the Second; —

  A fact that made her gratitude so hearty,

  To ‘Unser Frow,’ and her propitious shrine,

  She sent two waxen candles superfine,

  Long enough for a Lapland evening party!

  Rich was the Wedding Feast and rare —

  What sausages were there! —

  Of sweets and sours there was a perfect glut:

  With plenteous liquors to wash down good cheer;

  Brantwein, and Rhum, Kirsch-wasser, and Krug Bier,

  And wine so sharp that ev’ry one was cut.

  Rare was the feast — but rarer was the quality

  Of mirth, of smoky-joke, and song, and toast, —

  When just in all the middle of their jollity —

  With bumpers fill’d to Hostess and to Host,

  And all the unborn branches of their house,

  Unwelcome and unask’d, like Banquo’s Ghost,

  In walk’d the long-lost Spouse!

  What pen could ever paint

  The hubbub when the Hubs were thus confronted!

  The bridesmaids fitfully began to faint;

  The bridesmen stared — some whistled and some grunted:

  Fierce Hans the First look’d like a boar that’s hunted;

  Poor Hans the Second like a suckling calf:

  Meanwhile, confounded by the double miracle,

  The two-fold Bride sobb’d out, with tears hysterical,

  ‘Oh Holy Virgin, you’re too good — by half!’

  MORAL.

  Ye Coblenz maids, take warning by the rhyme,

  And as our Christian laws forbid polygamy

  For fear of bigamy,

  Only light up one taper at a time.

  LOVE LANGUAGE OF A MERRY YOUNG SOLDIER

  ‘Ach Gretchen, mein Taubchen.’

  O Gretel, my Dove, my heart’s Trumpet,

  My Cannon, my Big Drum, and also my Musket,

  O hear me, my mild little Dove,

  In your still little room.

  Your portrait, my Gretel, is always on guard,

  Is always attentive to Love’s parole and watchword;

  Your picture is always going the rounds,

  My Gretel, I call at every hour!

  My heart’s Knapsack is always full of you;

  My looks they are quartered with you;

  And when I bite off the top end of a cartridge

  Then I think that I give you a kiss.

  You alone are my Word of Command and orders,

  Yea my Right-face, Left Face, Brown Tommy, and wine,

  And at the word ‘Shoulder Arms!’

  Then I think you say ‘Take me in your arms.’

  Your eyes sparkle like a Battery,

  Yea they wound like Bombs and Grenades;

  As black as Gunpowder is your hair,

  Your hand as white as Parading breeches!

  Yes, you are the Match and I am the Cannon;

  Have pity, my love, and give quarter,

  And give the word of command

  Wheel round

  Into my heart’s Barrack Yard.’

  WHIMSICALITIES: A PERIODICAL GATHERING (1844)

  CONTENTS

  ANACREONTIC FOR THE NEW YEAR.

  A MORNING THOUGHT.

  NO!

  TO MY DAUGHTER ON HER BIRTHDAY.

  EPIGRAM ON MRS. PARKES’S PAMPHLET

  THE FORGE.

  SONNET: THE WORLD IS WITH ME

  THE FLOWER

  EPIGRAM: ON THE ART UNIONS

  A BLACK JOB.

  ON LIEUTENANT EYRE’S NARRATIVE OF THE DISASTERS AT CABUL

  EPIGRAM ON A LATE CATTLE-SHOW IN SMITHFIELD

  MORE HULLAH-BALOO

  ON A CERTAIN LOCALITY

  LAYING DOWN THE LAW

  EPIGRAM: THE SUPERIORITY OF MACHINERY

  A CUSTOM-HOUSE BREEZE

  PARTY SPIRIT

  ETCHING MORALISED

  A REFLECTION

  SPRING

  A FIRST ATTEMPT IN RHYME

  EPIGRAM ON THE CHINESE TREATY

  THE SEASON

  THE UNIVERSITY FEUD

  ON THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY

  THE LEE SHORE

  EPIGRAM: ON THE DEPRECIATED MONEY

  THE TURTLES

  EPIGRAM: THREE TRAITORS

  ANACREONTIC FOR THE NEW YEAR.

  COME, fill up the Bowl, for if ever the glass

  Found a proper excuse or fit season.

  For toasts to be honour’d, or pledges to pass,

  Sure, this hour brings an exquisite reason:

  For hark! the last chime of the dial has ceased,

  And Old Time, who his leisure to cozen,

  Had finish’d the Months, like the flasks at a feast,

  Is preparing to tap a fresh dozen!

  Hip! Hip! and Hurrah!

  Then fill, all ye Happy and Free, unto whom

  The past Year has been pleasant and sunny;

  Its months each as sweet as if made of the bloom

  Of the thyme whence the bee gathers honey —

  Days usher’d by dew-drops, instead of the tears,

  May be wrung from some wretcheder cousin —

  Then fill, and with gratitude join in the cheers

  That triumphantly hail a fresh dozen!

  Hip! Hip! and Hurrah!

  And ye, who have met with Adversity’s blast,

  And been bow’d to the earth by its fury;

  To whom the Twelve Months, that have recently pass’d,

  Were as harsh as a prejudiced jury, —

&nb
sp; Still, fill to the Future! and join in our chime,

  The regrets of remembrance to cozen,

  And having obtained a New Trial of Time,

  Shout in hopes of a kindlier dozen!

  Hip! Hip! and Hurrah!

  A MORNING THOUGHT.

  No more, no more will I resign

  My couch so warm and soft,

  To trouble trout with hook and line,

  That will not spring aloft.

  With larks appointment one may fix

  To greet the dawning skies,

  But hang the getting up at six

  For fish that will not rise!

  NO!

  No sun — no moon!

  No morn — no noon —

  No dawn —

  No sky — no earthly view —

  No distance looking blue —

  No road — no street — no “t’other side the way” —

  No end to any Row —

  No indications where the Crescents go —

  No top to any steeple —

  No recognitions of familiar people —

  No courtesies for showing ‘em —

  No knowing ‘em!

  No traveling at all — no locomotion,

  No inkling of the way — no notion —

  “No go” — by land or ocean —

  No mail — no post —

  No news from any foreign coast —

  No park — no ring — no afternoon gentility —

  No company — no nobility —

  No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,

  No comfortable feel in any member —

  No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees,

  No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds,

  November!

  TO MY DAUGHTER ON HER BIRTHDAY.

  Dear Fanny! nine long years ago,

  While yet the morning sun was low,

  And rosy with the Eastern glow

  The landscape smiled —

 

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