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Thomas Hood- Collected Poetical Works

Page 67

by Thomas Hood


  Go eat and drink, and give your hearts to mirth; —

  For vainly ye contend;

  Before you can decide about its birth,

  The world will have an end!’

  DEATH IN THE KITCHEN

  ‘Are we not here now?’ continued the corporal (striking the end of his stick perpendicularly on the floor, so as to give an idea of health and stability)—’ and are we not’ (dropping his hat upon the ground) ‘gone? — In a moment!’ — Tristram Shandy.

  Trim, thou art right!— ’Tis sure that I,

  And all who hear thee, are to die.

  The stoutest lad and wench

  Must lose their places at the will

  Of Death, and go at last to fill

  The sexton’s gloomy trench.

  The dreary grave! — O, when I think

  How close we stand upon its brink,

  My inward spirit groans!

  My eyes are filled with dismal dreams

  Of coffins, and this kitchen seems

  A charnel full of bones!

  Yes, jovial butler, thou must fail,

  As sinks the froth on thine own ale;

  Thy days will soon be done!

  Alas! the common hours that strike,

  Are knells, for life keeps wasting, like

  A cask upon the run.

  Ay, hapless scullion! ’tis thy case,

  Life travels at a scouring pace,

  Far swifter than thy hand.

  The fast-decaying frame of man

  Is but a kettle or a pan

  Time wears away with — sand!

  Thou needst not, mistress cook! be told,

  The meat to-morrow will be cold

  That now is fresh and hot:

  E’en thus our flesh will, by and by,

  Be cold as stone: — Cook, thou must die,

  There’s death within the pot.

  Susannah, too, my lady’s maid,

  Thy pretty person once must aid

  To swell the buried swarm!

  The ‘glass of fashion’ thou wilt hold

  No more, but grovel in the mould

  That’s not the ‘mould of form!’

  Yes, Jonathan, that drives the coach,

  He too will feel the fiend’s approach —

  The grave will pluck him down:

  He must in dust and ashes lie,

  And wear the churchyard livery,

  Grass green, turn’d up with brown.

  How frail is our uncertain breath!

  The laundress seems full hale, but Death

  Shall her ‘last linen’ bring.

  The groom will die, like all his kind;

  And e’en the stable boy will find

  This life no stable thing.

  Nay, see the household dog — even that

  The earth shall take; — the very cat

  Will share the common fall;

  Although she hold (the proverb saith)

  A ninefold life, one single death

  Suffices for them all!

  Cook, butler, Susan, Jonathan,

  The girl that scours the pot and pan,

  And those that tend the steeds —

  All, all shall have another sort

  Of service after This; — in short —

  The one the parson reads! —

  The dreary grave! — O, when I think

  How close we stand upon its brink,

  My inward spirit groans!

  My eyes are filled with dismal dreams

  Of coffins, and this kitchen seems

  A charnel full of bones!

  EPISTLE TO MISS CHARLOTTE REYNOLDS

  My dear Lot,

  There’s a blot! —

  This is to write

  That Sunday night

  By the late

  Coach at eight,

  We shall get in

  To little Britain,

  So have handy

  Gin, rum, Brandy —

  A lobster, may be —

  Cucumbers, they be

  Also in season

  And within reason —

  Porter — by Gum!

  Against we come —

  In lieu of Friday

  Then we keep high day

  And holy, as long as

  We can. I get strong as —

  A horse — i.e., pony

  Jane tho’ keeps boney.

  How is your mother,

  Still with your brother,

  And Marian too —

  And that good man too

  Call’d your papa, Miss.

  After these ah Miss!

  Don’t say I never

  Made an endeavour —

  To write you verses

  Tho’ this lay worse is

  Than any I’ve written

  The truth is, I’ve sitten

  So long over letters

  Addressed to your betters

  That — that — that

  Some how —

  My pen —

  Amen.

  T. Hood.

  [July 11, 1828.]

  ON THE DEATH OF THE GIRAFFE

  They say, God wot!

  She died upon the spot:

  But then in spots she was so rich,

  I wonder which?

  ON THE REMOVAL OF A MENAGERIE

  Let Exeter Change lament its change,

  Its beasts and other losses —

  Another place thrives by its case,

  Now Charing has two Crosses.

  BIRTHDAY VERSES

  Good-morrow to the golden Morning!

  Good-morrow to the world’s delight!

  I’ve come to bless thy life’s beginning,

  That hath made my own so bright! I

  I have brought no roses, Dearest!

  Summer lies upon her bier;

  It was when all sweets were over

  Thou wert born to bless the year.

  But I bring thee jewels, Fairest!

  In thy bonny locks to shine;

  And, if love seem in their glances,

  They have learn’d that look of mine!

  THE FAREWELL

  TO A FRENCH AIR

  Fare thee well,

  Gabrielle!

  Whilst I join France

  With bright cuirass and lance!

  Trumpets swell,

  Gabrielle!

  War-horses prance,

  And cavaliers advance!

  In the night,

  Ere the fight,

  In the night

  I’ll think of thee!

  And in prayer,

  Lady fair,

  In thy prayer

  Then think of me!

  Death may knell,

  Gabrielle!

  Where my plumes dance

  By arquebuss or lance,

  Then farewell,

  Gabrielle!

  Take my last glance,

  Fair Miracle of France.

  ON A PICTURE OF HERO AND LEANDER

  Why, Love, why

  Such a Water-rover?

  Would she love thee more

  For coming half seas over?

  Why, Lady, why

  So in love with dipping?

  Must a lad of Greece

  Come all over dripping?

  Why, Cupid, why

  Make the passage brighter?

  Were not any boat

  Better than a lighter?

  Why, Maiden, why

  So intrusive standing?

  Must thou be on the stair,

  When he’s on the landing?

  FOR THE FOURTEENTH OF FEBRUARY

  No popular respect will I omit

  To do thee honour on this happy day,

  When every loyal lover tasks his wit

  His simple truth in studious rhymes to pay,

  And to his mistress dear his hopes convey.

  Rather, thou knowest, I would still outrun

  All calendars with Love’s, whose date alway

  Thy b
right eyes govern better than the sun,

  For with thy favour was my life begun;

  And still I reckon on from smiles to smiles,

  And not by summers, for I thrive on none

  But those thy cheerful countenance compiles —

  Oh, if it be to choose and call thee mine,

  Love, thou art every day my Valentine!

  A BUNCH OF FORGET-ME-NOTS

  Forget me not! It is the cry of clay,

  From infancy to age, from ripe to rotten;

  For who, ‘to dumb forgetfulness a prey,’

  Would be forgotten?

  Hark the poor infant, in the age of pap,

  A little Laplander on nurse’s lap,

  Some strange, neglectful, gossiping old Trot,

  Meanwhile on dull Oblivion’s lap she lieth,

  In her shrill Baby-lonish language crieth —

  What?— ‘Forget-me-not!’

  The schoolboy writes unto the self-same tune,

  The yearly letter, guiltless of a blot,

  ‘We break up on the twenty-third of June’;

  And then, with comps, from Dr. Polyglot,

  ‘P.S. Forget me not!’

  When last my elder brother sailed for Quito,

  My chalky foot had in a hobble got —

  Why did he plant his timber toe on my toe,

  To stamp on memory’s most tender spot

  ‘Forget me not!’

  The dying nabob, on whose shrivelled skin

  The Indian ‘mulliga’ has left its ‘tawny,’

  Leaving life’s pilgrimage so rough and thorny,

  Bindeth his kin

  Two tons of sculptured marble to allot —

  A small ‘Forget me not!’

  The hardy sailor parting from his wives,

  Sharing among them all that he has got,

  Keeps a fond eye upon their after-lives,

  And says to seventeen—’ If I am shot,

  Forget me not.’

  Why, all the mob of authors that now trouble

  The world with cold-pressed volumes and with hot,

  They all are seeking reputation’s bubble,

  Hopelessly hoping, like Sir Walter Scott,

  To tie in fame’s own handkerchief a double

  Forget-me-knot!

  A past past tense,

  In fact, is sought for by all human kind,

  And hence

  Our common Irish wish — to leave ourselves behind.

  Forget me not! — It is the common chorus

  Swell’d by all those behind us and before us;

  Each fifth of each November

  Calls out ‘Remember!’

  And even a poor man of straw will try

  To live by dint of powder and of plot.

  In short, it is the cry of every Guy —

  ‘Forget me not!’

  THE POET’S PORTION

  What is a mine — a treasury — a dower —

  A magic talisman of mighty power?

  A poet’s wide possession of the earth:

  He has th’ enjoyment of a flower’s birth

  Before its budding — ere the first red streaks,

  And winter cannot rob him of their cheeks.

  Look if his dawn be not ere other men’s!

  Twenty bright flushes — ere another kens

  The first of sunlight is abroad, he sees

  Its gold election of the topmost trees,

  And opes the splendid fissures of the morn.

  When do his fruits delay? When doth his corn

  Linger for harvesting? Before the leaf

  Is commonly abroad, in his piled sheaf

  The flagging poppies lose their ardent flame.

  No sweet there is, no pleasure you can name,

  But he will sip it first — before the lees; —

  ’Tis his to taste rich honey ere the bees

  Are busy with the brooms: he may forestal

  June’s rpsy advent for his coronal,

  Before expectance buds upon the bough,

  Twining his thoughts to bloom upon his brow.

  Oh! blest to see the flower in its seed,

  Before its leafy presence; for, indeed,

  Leaves are but wings on which the summer flies,

  And each thing, perishable, fades and dies,

  Except in thought; but his rich thinkings be

  Like overflows of immortality —

  So that what there is steeped shall perish never,

  But live and bloom, and be a joy for ever! —

  I’Μ NOT A SINGLE MAN

  LINES WRITTEN IN A YOUNG LADY’S ALBUM

  A pretty task, Miss S —— , to ask

  A Benedictine pen,

  That cannot quite at freedom write

  Like those of other men.

  No lover’s plaint my Muse must paint

  To fill this page’s span,

  But be correct and recollect

  I’m not a single man.

  Pray only think, for pen and ink

  How hard to get along,

  That may not turn on words that burn

  Or Love, the life of song!

  Nine Muses, if I chooses, I

  May woo all in a clan,

  But one Miss S — I daren’t address —

  I’m not a single man.

  Scribblers unwed, with little head

  May eke it out with heart,

  And in their lays it often plays

  A rare first-fiddle part.

  They make a kiss to rhyme with bliss,

  But if I so began,

  I have my fears about my ears —

  I’m not a single man.

  Upon your cheek I may not speak,

  Nor on your lip be warm,

  I must be wise about your eyes,

  And formal with your form;

  Of all that sort of thing, in short,

  On T. H. Bayly’s plan,

  I must not twine a single line —

  I’m not a single man.

  A watchman’s part compels my heart

  To keep you off its beat,

  And I might dare as soon to swear

  At you, as at your feet.

  I can’t expire in passion’s fire

  As other poets can —

  My life (she’s by) won’t let me die —

  I’m not a single man. —

  Shut out from love, denied a dove,

  Forbidden bow and dart,

  Without a groan to call my own,

  With neither hand nor heart;

  To Hymen vow’d, and not allow’d

  To flirt e’en with your fan,

  Here end, as just a friend, I must —

  I’m not a single man.

  PLAYING AT SOLDIERS

  ‘Who’ll serve the King?’

  What little urchin is there never

  Hath had that early scarlet fever,

  Of martial trappings caught?

  Trappings well called — because they trap

  And catch full many a country chap

  To go where fields are fought!

  What little urchin with a rag

  Hath never made a little flag

  (Our plate will shew the manner),

  And wooed each tiny neighbour still,

  Tommy or Harry, Dick or Will,

  To come beneath the banner!

  Just like that ancient shape of mist,

  In Hamlet, crying “List, O ‘list!’

  Come, who will serve the king,

  And strike frog-eating Frenchmen dead

  And cut off Boneyparty’s head? —

  And all that sort of thing.

  So used I, when I was a boy,

  To march with military toy,

  And ape the soldier-life;

  And with a whistle or a hum,

  I thought myself a Duke of Drum

  At least, or Earl of Fife.

  With gun of tin and sword of lath,

  Lord! ho
w I walk’d in glory’s path

  With regimental mates,

  By sound of trump and rub-a-dubs,

  To ‘siege the washhouse — charge the tubs —

  Or storm the garden gates! —

  Ah me! my retrospective soul!

  As over memory’s muster-roll

  I cast my eyes anew,

  My former comrades all the while

  Rise up before me, rank and file,

  And form in dim review.

  Ay, there they stand, and dress in line,

  Lubbock, and Fenn, and David Vine,

  And dark ‘Jamakey Forde!’

  And limping Wood, and ‘Cocky Hawes,’ —

  Our captain always made, because

  He had a real sword!

  Long Lawrence, Natty Smart, and Soame,

  Who said he had a gun at home,

  But that was all a brag;

  Ned Ryder, too, that used to sham

  A prancing horse, and big Sam Lamb

  That would hold up the flag!

  Tom Anderson, and ‘Dunny White,’

  Who never right-abouted right,

  For he was deaf and dumb;

  Jack Pike, Jem Crack, and Sandy Gray

  And Dickey Bird, that wouldn’t play

  Unless he had the drum.

  And Peter Holt, and Charley Jepp,

  A chap that never kept the step —

  No more did ‘Surly Hugh;’

  Bob Harrington, and ‘Fighting Jim’ —

  We often had to halt for him,

  To let him tie his shoe. —

  ‘Quarrelsome Scott,’ and Martin Dick,

  That killed the bantam cock, to stick

  The plumes within his hat;

  Bill Hook, and little Tommy Grout

  That got so thumped for calling out

  ‘Eyes right!’ to ‘Squinting Matt.’

  Dan Simpson, that, with Peter Dodd,

  Was always in the awkward squad,

 

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