AN EPISTLE TO A LADY
AFTER
venting all my Spight,
Tell
me, what have I to write?
Ev'ry
Error I could find
Thro'
the Mazes of your Mind,
Have
my busy Muse employ'd,
Till
the Company was cloy'd.
Are
you positive and fretful?
Heedless,
ignorant, forgetful?
Those,
and twenty Follies more,
I
have often told before. 10
HEARKEN, what my Lady says—:
Have
I nothing then to praise?
Ill
it fits you to be witty,
Where
a Fault shou'd move your Pity.
If
you think me too conceited,
Or,
to Passion quickly heated:
If
my wand'ring Head be less
Set
on Reading, than on Dress:
If
I always seem too dull t'ye;
I
can solve the Diffi---culty.
20
YOU wou'd teach me to be wise;
Truth
and Honour how to prize;
How
to shine in Conversation,
And,
with Credit fill my Station;
How
to relish Notions high;
How
to live, and how to die.
BUT it was decreed by Fate---;
Mr.
DEAN, You come too late:
Well
I know, you can discern,
I
am now too old to learn: 30
Follies,
from my Youth instill'd,
Have
my Soul entirely fill'd:
In
my Head and Heart they center;
Nor
will let your Lessons enter.
BRED a Fondling, and an Heiress;
Drest
like any Lady May'ress;
Cocker'd
by the Servants round,
Was
too good to touch the Ground:
Thought
the Life of ev'ry Lady
Shou'd
be one continu'd Play-Day:
40
Balls,
and Masquerades, and Shows,
Visits,
Plays, and Powder'd Beaux.
THUS you have my Case at large,
And
may now perform your Charge.
Those
Materials I have furnish'd,
When,
by you refin'd and burnish'd,
Must,
that all the World may know 'em,
Be
reduc'd into a Poem.
But,
I beg, suspend a While,
That
same paultry Burlesque Stile:
50
Drop,
for once, your constant Rule,
Turning
all to Ridicule:
Teaching
others how to ape ye;
Court,
nor Parli'ment, can 'scape ye;
Treat
the Publick, and your Friends,
Both
alike; while neither mends.
SING my Praise in Strain sublime:
Treat
me not with Doggrel Rhime.
'Tis
but just, you shou'd produce,
With
each Fault, each Fault's Excuse:
60
Not
to publish ev'ry Trifle,
And
my few Perfections stifle.
With
some Gifts, at least endow me,
Which
my very Foes allow me.
Am
I spightful, proud, unjust?
Did
I ever break my Trust?
Which,
of all our modern Dames
Censures
less, or less defames?
In
Good Manners, am I faulty?
Can
you call me rude, or haughty?
70
Did
I e'er my Mite withold
From
the Impotent and Old?
When
did ever I omit
Due
Regard for Men of Wit?
When
have I Esteem express'd
For
a Coxcomb gaily dress'd?
Do
I, like the Female Tribe,
Think
it Wit to fleer, and gibe?
Who,
with less designing Ends,
Kindlier
entertains her Friends? 80
THINK not Cards my chief Diversion,
'Tis
a wrong, unjust Aspersion:
Never
know I any Good in 'um,
But,
to doze my Head, like Lodanum.
We,
by Play, as Men by Drinking,
Pass
our Nights, to drive out thinking.
From
my Ailments give me Leisure,
I
shall read and think with Pleasure:
Conversation
learn to relish,
And
with Books my Mind embellish.
90
NOW, methinks, I hear you cry;
Mr.
DEAN, you must reply.
MADAM, I allow 'tis true;
All
these Praises are your Due.
You,
like some acute Philosopher,
Ev'ry
Fault have drawn a Gloss over:
Placing
in the strongest Light,
All
your Virtues to my Sight.
THO' you lead a blameless Life,
Are
an humble, prudent Wife;
100
Answer
all domestick Ends,
What
is this to us your Friends?
Tho'
your Children by a Nod
Stand
in Awe without a Rod:
Tho'
by your obliging Sway
Servants
love you, and obey:
Tho'
you treat us with a Smile,
Clear
your Looks, and smooth your Stile:
Load
our Plates from ev'ry Dish;
This
is not the Thing we wish.
110
Col'nel
may be your Debtor;
We
expect Employment better.
You
must learn, if you would gain us,
With
good sense to entertain us.
SCHOLARS, when good Sense describing,
Call
it Tasting, and lmbibing:
Metaphorick
Meat and Drink,
Is
to understand, and think:
We
may carve for others thus;
And
let others carve for us.
120
To
discourse, and to attend,
Is
to help yourself, and Friend.
Conversation
is but carving,
Carve
for all, yourself is starving.
Give
no more to ev'ry Guest,
Than
he's able to digest:
Give
him always of the Prime,
And,
but little at a Time.
Carve
to all but just enuff,
Let
them neither starve, nor stuff:
130
And,
that you may have your Due,
Let
your Neighbours carve for you.
TO conclude this long Essay;
Pardon,
if I disobey:
Nor,
against my nat'ral Vein,
Treat
you in Heroick Strain.
I,
as all the Parish knows,
Hardly
can be grave in Prose:
Still
to lash, and lashing Smile,
Ill
befits a lofty Stile.
140
From
the Planet of my Birth,
r
encounter Vice with Mirth.
Wicked
Ministers of State
I
can easier scorn than hate:
And
I find it answers right:
Scorn
torments them more than Spight.
All
the Vices of a Court,
Do
but serve to make me Sport.
Shou'd
a Monkey wear a Crown,
Must
I tremble at his Frown? 150
Could
I not, thro' all his Ermine,
Spy
the strutting chatt'ring Vermin?
Safely
write a smart Lampoon,
To
expose the brisk Baboon?
WHEN my Muse officious ventures
On
the Nation's Representers;
Teaching
by what Golden Rules
Into
Knaves they turn their Fools:
How
the Helm is rul'd by —
At
whose Oars, like Slaves, they all pull:
160
Let
the Vessel split on Shelves,
With
the Freight enrich themselves:
Safe
within my little Wherry,
All
their Madness makes me merry:
Like
the Watermen of Thames
,
I row by, and call them Names.
Like
the ever-laughing Sage,
In
a Jest I spend my Rage:
(Tho'
it must be understood,
I
would hang them if I cou'd:)
170
If
I can but fill my Nitch,
I
attempt no higher Pitch.
Leave
to D'ANVERS and his Mate,
Maxims
wise, to rule the State.
POULTNEY
deep, accomplish'd ST. JOHNS,
Scourge
the Villains with a Vengeance.
Let
me, tho' the Smell be Noisom,
Strip
their Bums; let CALEB hoyse 'em;
Then,
apply ALECTO'S Whip,
'Till
they wriggle, howl, and skip. 180
DEUCE is in you, Mr. DEAN;
What
can all this Passion mean?
Mention
Courts, you'll ne'er be quiet;
On
Corruptions running Riot.
End,
as it befits your Station;
Come
to use, and Application:
Nor
with Senates keep a Fuss,
I
submit; and answer thus.
IF the Machinations brewing,
To
compleat the Publick Ruin,
190
Never
once cou'd have the Pow'r
To
affect me half an Hour;
If
I laugh at Whig and Tory;
I
conclude a Fortiori,
All
your Eloquence will scarce
Drive
me from my fav'rite Farce.
This
I must insist on. For, as
It
is well observ'd by HORACE
Ridicule
has greater Pow'r
To
reform the World, than Sour.
200
Horses
thus, let Jockeys judge else,
Switches
better guide than Cudgels.
Bastings
heavy, dry, obtuse,
Only
Dulness can produce,
While
a little gentle Jerking
Sets
the Spirits all a working.
THUS, I find it by Experiment,
Scolding
moves you less than Merriment.
I
may storm and rage in vain;
It
but stupifies your Brain.
210
But,
with Raillery to nettle,
Set
your Thoughts upon their Mettle:
Gives
Imagination Scope,
Never
lets your Mind elope:
Drives
out Brangling and Contention,
Brings
in Reason and Invention.
For
your Sake, as well as mine,
1
the lofty Stile decline.
1
Shou'd make a Figure scurvy,
And
your Head turn Topsy-turvy.
220
I, WHO love to have a Fling,
Both
at Senate-House, and —That they might some better Way tread,
To
avoid the publick Hatred;
Thought
no Method more commodious,
Than
to shew their Vices odious:
Which
I chose to make appear,
Not
by Anger, but a Sneer:
As
my Method of Reforming,
Is
by Laughing, not by Storming.
230
(For
my Friends have always thought
Tenderness
my greatest Fault.)
Wou'd
you have me change my Stile,
On
your Faults no longer smile?
But,
to patch up all our Quarrels,
Quote
you Texts from Plutarch's Morals;
Or
from Solomon produce
Maxims
teaching Wisdom's Use.
IF I treat you like
You
have cheap enough compounded.
240
Can
you put in higher Claims,
Than
the Owners of St. J—s.
You
are not so great a Grievance
As
the Hirelings of St. St—s.
You
are of a lower Class
Than
my Friend Sir R— Br—s.
None
of these have Mercy found:
1
have laugh'd, and lash'd them round.
HAVE you seen a Rocket fly?
You
would swear it pierc'd the Sky;
250
It
but reach'd the middle Air,
Bursting
into Pieces there:
Thousand
Sparkles falling down
Light
on many a Coxcomb's Crown.
See,
what Mirth the Sport creates;
Sindges
Hair, but breaks no Pates.
THUS, Shou'd I attempt to climb,
Treat
you in a Stile sublime,
Such
a Rocket is my Muse,
Shou'd
I lofty Numbers chuse,
260
E'er
I reach'd Parnassus Top
I
shou'd burst, and bursting drop.
All
my Fire would fall in Scraps,
Give
your Head some gentle Raps;
Only
make it smart a while:
Then
cou'd I forbear to smile,
When
I found the tingling Pain,
Entring
warm your frigid Brain
Make
you able upon Sight,
To
decide of Wrong and Right?
270
Talk
with Sense, whate'er you please on,
Learn
to relish Truth and Reason.
THUS we both should gain our Prize:
I
to laugh, and you grow wise.