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The Bab Ballads [10]

By Root 241 0
it certainty complete,

And introduced the deputation.



But no - the clown my prospect blights -

(The worth of birth it surely teaches!)

"Why should I want to spend my nights

In Parliament, a-making speeches?



"I haven't never been to school -

I ain't had not no eddication -

And I should surely be a fool

To publish that to all the nation!"



I offered him a trotting horse -

No hack had ever trotted faster -

I also offered him, of course,

A rare and curious "old master."



I offered to procure him weeds -

Wines fit for one in his position -

But, though an ass in all his deeds,

He'd learnt the meaning of "commission."



He called me "thief" the other day,

And daily from his door he thrusts me;

Much more of this, and soon I may

Begin to think that BROWN mistrusts me.



So deaf to all sound Reason's rule

This poor uneducated clown is,

You canNOT fancy what a fool

Poor rich uneducated BROWN is.







Ballad: Sir Macklin







Of all the youths I ever saw

None were so wicked, vain, or silly,

So lost to shame and Sabbath law,

As worldly TOM, and BOB, and BILLY.



For every Sabbath day they walked

(Such was their gay and thoughtless natur)

In parks or gardens, where they talked

From three to six, or even later.



SIR MACKLIN was a priest severe

In conduct and in conversation,

It did a sinner good to hear

Him deal in ratiocination.



He could in every action show

Some sin, and nobody could doubt him.

He argued high, he argued low,

He also argued round about him.



He wept to think each thoughtless youth

Contained of wickedness a skinful,

And burnt to teach the awful truth,

That walking out on Sunday's sinful.



"Oh, youths," said he, "I grieve to find

The course of life you've been and hit on -

Sit down," said he, "and never mind

The pennies for the chairs you sit on.



"My opening head is 'Kensington,'

How walking there the sinner hardens,

Which when I have enlarged upon,

I go to 'Secondly' - its 'Gardens.'



"My 'Thirdly' comprehendeth 'Hyde,'

Of Secresy the guilts and shameses;

My 'Fourthly' - 'Park' - its verdure wide -

My 'Fifthly' comprehends 'St. James's.'



"That matter settled, I shall reach

The 'Sixthly' in my solemn tether,

And show that what is true of each,

Is also true of all, together.



"Then I shall demonstrate to you,

According to the rules of WHATELY,

That what is true of all, is true

Of each, considered separately."



In lavish stream his accents flow,

TOM, BOB, and BILLY dare not flout him;

He argued high, he argued low,

He also argued round about him.



"Ha, ha!" he said, "you loathe your ways,

You writhe at these my words of warning,

In agony your hands you raise."

(And so they did, for they were yawning.)



To "Twenty-firstly" on they go,

The lads do not attempt to scout him;

He argued high, he argued low,

He also argued round about him.



"Ho, ho!" he cries, "you bow your crests -

My eloquence has set you weeping;

In shame you bend upon your breasts!"

(And so they did, for they were sleeping.)



He proved them this - he proved them that -

This good but wearisome ascetic;

He jumped and thumped upon his hat,

He was so very energetic.



His Bishop at this moment chanced

To pass, and found the road encumbered;

He noticed how the Churchman danced,

And how his congregation slumbered.



The hundred and eleventh head

The priest completed of his stricture;

"Oh, bosh!" the worthy Bishop said,

And walked him off as in the picture.







Ballad: The Yarn Of The "Nancy Bell"







'Twas on the shores that round our coast

From Deal to Ramsgate span,

That I found alone on a piece of stone

An elderly naval man.



His hair was weedy, his beard was long,

And weedy and long was he,

And I heard this wight on the shore recite,

In a singular minor key:
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