New eunuchs, harlequins, and operas.He hears, and as a still with simples in itBetween each drop it gives, stays half a minute,Loth to enrich me with too quick replies,By little and by little drops his lies.Mere household trash! of birth-nights, balls, and shows,More than ten Holinsheds, or Halls, or Stowes.When the Queen frowned, or smiled, he knows; and whatA subtle minister may make of that;Who sins with whom: who got his pension rug,Or quickened a reversion by a drug;Whose place is quartered out, three parts in four,And whether to a bishop, or a w***e;Who having lost his credit, pawned his rent,Is therefore fit to have a Government;Who in the secret, deals in stocks secure,And cheats the unknowing widow and the poor;Who makes a trust or charity a job,And gets an Act of Parliament to rob;Why turnpikes rise, and now no cit nor clownCan gratis see the country, or the town;Shortly no lad shall chuck, or lady vole,But some excising courtier will have toll.He tells what strumpet places sells for life,What ’squire his lands, what citizen his wife:And last (which proves him wiser still than all)What lady’s face is not a whited wall. As one of Woodward’s patients, sick, and sore,I puke, I nauseate—yet he thrusts in more:Trims Europe’s balance, tops the statesman’s part,And talks gazettes and post-boys o’er by heart.Like a big wife at sight of loathsome meatReady to cast, I yawn, I sigh and sweat.Then as a licensed spy, whom nothing canSilence or hurt, he libels the great man;Swears every place entailed for years to come,In sure succession to the day of doom;He names the price for every office paid,And says our wars thrive ill, because delayed;Nay hints, ’tis by connivance of the Court,That Spain robs on, and Dunkirk’s still a port.Not more amazement seized on Circe’s guests,To see themselves fall endlong into beasts,Than mine, to find a subject staid and wiseAlready half turned traitor by surprise.I felt the infection slide from him to me,As in the ---- some give it to get free;And quick to swallow me, methought I sawOne of our giant statutes ope its jaw. In that nice moment, as another lieStood just a-tilt, the minister came by.To him he flies, and bows, and bows again,Then, close as Umbra, joins the dirty train.Not Fannius’ self more impudently near,When half his nose is in his Prince’s ear.I quaked at heart; and still afraid, to seeAll the Court filled with stranger things than he,Ran out as fast as one that pays his bailAnd dreads more actions, hurries from a jail. Bear me, some god! oh, quickly bear me henceTo wholesome solitude, the nurse of sense:Where Contemplation plumes her ruffled wings,And the free soul looks down to pity kings!There sober thought pursued the amusing theme,Till fancy coloured it, and formed a dream.A vision hermits can to hell transport,And forced even me to see the damned at Court.Not Dante dreaming all the infernal state,Beheld such scenes of envy, sin, and hate.Base fear becomes the guilty, not the free;Suits tyrants, plunderers, but suits not me:Shall I, the terror of this sinful town,Care, if a liveried lord or smile or frown?Who cannot flatter, and detest who can,Tremble before a noble serving-man?O, my fair mistress, Truth! shall I quit theeFor huffing, braggart, puffed nobility?Thou, who since yesterday hast rolled o’er allThe busy, idle blockheads of the ball,Hast thou, oh, sun! beheld an emptier fort,Than such who swell this bladder of a Court?Now plague on those who show a Court in wax!It ought to bring all courtiers on their backs:Such painted puppets! such a varnished raceOf hollow gewgaws, only dress and face!Such waxen noses, stately staring things—No wonder some folks bow, and think them kings. See! where the British youth, engaged no moreAt Fig’s, at White’s, with felons, or a bore,Pay their last duty to the Court and comeAll fresh and fragrant, to the drawing-room;In hues as gay, and odours as divine,As the fair fields they sold to look so fine.“That’s velvet for a king!” the flatterer swears’Tis true, for ten days hence ’twill be King Lear’s.Our Court may justly to our stage give rules,That helps it both to fools-coats and to fools.And why not players strut in courtiers’ clothes?For these are actors too, as well as those:Wants reach all states; they beg but better drest,And all is splended poverty at best.Painted for sight, and essenced for the smell,Like frigates fraught with spice and cochinel,Sail in the ladies: how each pirate eyesSo weak a vessel, and so rich a prize!Top-gallant he, and she in all her trim,He boarding her, she striking sail to him:“Dear Countess! you have charms all hearts to hit!”And “Sweet Sir Fopling! you have so much wit!”Such wits and beauties are not praised for nought,For both the beauty and the wit are bought.’Twould burst even Heraclitus with the spleenTo see those antics, Fopling and Courtin:The presence seems, with things so richly odd,The mosque of Mahound, or some queer Pagod.See them survey their limbs by Durer’s rules,Of all beau-kind the best proportioned fools!Adjust their clothes, and to confession drawThose venial sins, an atom, or a straw;But oh! what terrors must distract the soulConvicted of that mortal crime, a hole;Or should one pound of powder less bespreadThose monkey tails that wag behind their head.Thus finished, and corrected to a hair,They march, to prate their hour before the fair.So first to preach a white-gloved chaplain goes,With band of lily, and with cheek of rose,Sweeter than Sharon, in immaculate trim,Neatness itself impertinent in him.Let but the ladies smile, and they are blest:Prodigious! how the things protest, protest:Peace, fools, or Gonson will for Papists seize you,If once he catch you at your Jesu! Jesu! Nature made every fop to plague his brother,Just as one beauty mortifies another.But here’s the captain that will plague them both,Whose air cries Arm! whose very look’s an oath:The captain’s honest, Sirs, and that’s enough,Though his soul’s bullet, and his body buff.He spits fore-right; his haughty chest before,Like battering rams, beats open every door:And with a face as red, and as awry,As Herod’s hangdogs in old tapestry,Scarecrow to boys, the breeding woman’s curse,Has yet a strange ambition to look worse;Confounds the civil, keeps the rude in awe,Jests like a licensed fool, commands like law. Frighted, I quit the room, but leave it soAs men from jails to execution go;For hung with deadly sins I see the wall,And lined with giants deadlier than ’em alclass="underline" Each man an Askapart, of strength to tossFor quoits, both Temple Bar and Charing Cross.Scared at the grizzly forms, I sweat, I fly,And shake all o’er, like a discovered spy. Courts are too much for wits so weak as mine:Charge them with Heaven’s artillery, bold divine!From such alone the great rebukes endureWhose satire’s sacred, and whose rage secure: ’Tis mine to wash a few light stains, but theirsTo deluge sin, and drown a Court in tears.However, what’s now Apocrypha, my wit,In time to come, may pass for holy writ.