Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

THE COBLER

OF

TISSINGTON'S LETTER

TO DAVID GARRICK, ESQ.

1761.

My predecessors often use,

To cobble verse as well as shoes;
AS PARTRIDGE (vide SWIFT's disputes)
Who turned BOOTES into boots,

Ah!-PARTRIDGE!-I'll be bold to say

Was a rare scholar in his day;

He'd tell you when t'wou'd rain, and when
The weather would be fine
agen;

Precisely when your bones should ache,
And when grow sound, by th' almanack.
For he knew ev'ry thing, d'ye see,
By what d'ye call't, astrology,
And skill'd in all the starry system,
Foretold events, and often mist'em.
And then it griev'd me sore to look
Just at the heel-piece of his book,
Where stood a man, Lord bless my
(No doubt by matthew maticks art,)

K

heart!

Naked, expos'd to public view,

And darts stuck in him through and through, I warrant him some hardy fool,

Who scorn'd to follow wisdom's rule,

And dar'd blasphemously despise

Our doctor's knowledge in the skies.
Full dearly he abides his laugh,
I'm sure 'tis SWIFT, or BICKERSTAFF.
Excuse this bit of a digression,
A cobler's is a learn'd profession.
Why may not I too couple rhymes?
My wit will not disgrace the times;
I too, forsooth, among the rest,
Claim one advantage, and the best,
I scarce know writing, have no reading,
Nor any kind of scholar breeding ;

And wanting that's the sole foundation
Of half your poets' reputation.
While genius, perfect in it's birth,

Springs up, like mushrooms from the earth.
You know they send me to and fro

To carry messages or so;

And tho' I'm somewhat old and crazy,
I'm still of service to the lazy.

For our good 'squire has no great notion
Of much alacrity in motion,

And when there's miles betwixt, you know Would rather send by half, than go;

Then I'm dispatch'd to travel hard,

[ocr errors]

And bear myself by way of card.
I'm a two-legg'd excuse to shew
Why other people cannot go;
And merit sure I must assume,
For once I went in GARRICK's room.
In my old age, 'twere wond'rous hard
To come to town, as trav'lling card,
Then let the post convey me there,
The clerk's direction tell him where,
For, tho' I ramble at this rate

He writes it all, and I dictate;

For I'm resolv'd-by help of neighbour,
(Who keeps a school, and goes to labour)
To tell you all things as they past;
Coblers will go beyond their last,
And so I'm told will authors too,

-But that's a point I leave to you;
Cobbling extends a thousand ways,
Some cobble shoes, some cobble plays;
Some but this jingle's vastly clever,
It makes a body write for ever.
While with the motion of the pen,
METHOD pops in and out agen,

So, as I said, I thought it better,
To set me down and think a letter,
And without any more ado,

Seal up my mind, and send it you.
You'll ask me, master, why I chuse
To plague your worship with my muse?
I'll tell you then-will truth offend ?
Tho' cobler, yet I love my friend.
Besides, I like you merry folks,

Who make their puns, and crack their jokes;
Your jovial hearts are never wrong,

I love a story, or a song;

But always feel most grievous qualms,

From WESTLEY'S hymns, or WISDOM'S psalms.
My father often told me, one day
Was for religion-that was Sunday,
When I should go to prayers twice,
And hear our parson battle vice;
And dress'd in all my finest cloaths,
Twang the psalmody thro' my nose.
But betwixt churches, for relief,

Eat bak'd plumb-pudding, and roast beef;
And chearful, without sin, regale

With good home-brew'd, and nappy ale,
But not one word of fasting greetings,

And dry religious singing meetings.

But here comes folks a-preaching to us

A saving doctrine to undo us,
Whose notions fanciful and scurvy,

Turn old religion topsy-turvy.

I'll give my pleasure up for no man,
And an't I right now, master SHOW-MAN?
You seem to me a person civil,

Our parson gives you to the devil;

And says, as how, that after grace,
You laugh'd directly in his face;

Ay, laugh'd out-right (as I'm a sinner)
I should have lik'd t' have been at dinner,
Not for the sake of master's fare,
But to have seen the doctor stare.
Odzooks, I think, he's perfect mad,
Scar'd out of all the wits he had,
For wheresoe'er the doctor comes,
He pulls his wig, and bites his thumbs,

And mutters, in a broken rage,

The MINOR, GARRICK, FOOTE, the STAGE;

(For I must blab it out-but hist,

His reverence is a methodist)

And preaches like an errant fury,

'Gainst all your show folks about DRURY,

Says actors all are hellish imps,

And managers the devil's pimps.

« ZurückWeiter »