Poetical Works. Charles Churchill

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Poetical Works - Charles Churchill

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the guilty bawl;

       When Vice and Folly for correction call,

       Silence the mark of weakness justly bears,

       And is partaker of the crimes it spares.

       But if the Muse, too cruel in her mirth, 330

       With harsh reflections wounds the man of worth;

       If wantonly she deviates from her plan,

       And quits the actor to expose the man;[91]

       Ashamed, she marks that passage with a blot,

       And hates the line where candour was forgot.

       But what is candour, what is humour's vein,

       Though judgment join to consecrate the strain,

       If curious numbers will not aid afford,

       Nor choicest music play in every word?

       Verses must run, to charm a modern ear, 340

       From all harsh, rugged interruptions clear.

       Soft let them breathe, as Zephyr's balmy breeze,

       Smooth let their current flow, as summer seas;

       Perfect then only deem'd when they dispense

       A happy tuneful vacancy of sense.

       Italian fathers thus, with barbarous rage,

       Fit helpless infants for the squeaking stage;

       Deaf to the calls of pity, Nature wound,

       And mangle vigour for the sake of sound.

       Henceforth farewell, then, feverish thirst of fame; 350

       Farewell the longings for a poet's name;

       Perish my Muse—a wish 'bove all severe

       To him who ever held the Muses dear—

       If e'er her labours weaken to refine

       The generous roughness of a nervous line.

       Others affect the stiff and swelling phrase;

       Their Muse must walk in stilts, and strut in stays;

       The sense they murder, and the words transpose,

       Lest poetry approach too near to prose.

       See tortured Reason how they pare and trim, 360

       And, like Procrustes, stretch, or lop the limb.

       Waller! whose praise succeeding bards rehearse,

       Parent of harmony in English verse,

       Whose tuneful Muse in sweetest accents flows,

       In couplets first taught straggling sense to close.

       In polish'd numbers and majestic sound,

       Where shall thy rival, Pope! be ever found?

       But whilst each line with equal beauty flows.

       E'en excellence, unvaried, tedious grows.

       Nature, through all her works, in great degree, 370

       Borrows a blessing from variety.

       Music itself her needful aid requires

       To rouse the soul, and wake our dying fires.

       Still in one key, the nightingale would tease;

       Still in one key, not Brent would always please.

       Here let me bend, great Dryden! at thy shrine,

       Thou dearest name to all the Tuneful Nine!

       What if some dull lines in cold order creep,

       And with his theme the poet seems to sleep?

       Still, when his subject rises proud to view, 380

       With equal strength the poet rises too:

       With strong invention, noblest vigour fraught,

       Thought still springs up and rises out of thought;

       Numbers ennobling numbers in their course,

       In varied sweetness flow, in varied force;

       The powers of genius and of judgment join,

       And the whole Art of Poetry is thine.

       But what are numbers, what are bards to me,

       Forbid to tread the paths of poesy?

       A sacred Muse should consecrate her pen—390

       Priests must not hear nor see like other men—

       Far higher themes should her ambition claim:

       Behold where Sternhold points the way to fame!

       Whilst with mistaken zeal dull bigots burn,

       Let Reason for a moment take her turn.

       When coffee-sages hold discourse with kings,

       And blindly walk in paper leading-strings,

       What if a man delight to pass his time

       In spinning reason into harmless rhyme,

       Or sometimes boldly venture to the play? 400

       Say, where's the crime, great man of prudence, say?

       No two on earth in all things can agree;

       All have some darling singularity:

       Women and men, as well as girls and boys,

       In gew-gaws take delight, and sigh for toys.

       Your sceptres and your crowns, and such like things,

       Are but a better kind of toys for kings.

       In things indifferent Reason bids us choose,

       Whether the whim's a monkey or a Muse.

       What the grave triflers on this busy scene, 410

       When they make use of this word Reason, mean,

       I know not; but according to my plan,

       'Tis Lord Chief-Justice in the court of man;

       Equally form'd to rule in age or youth,

       The friend of virtue and the guide to truth;

       To her I bow, whose sacred power I feel;

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