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The
Beggar's Petition
Amidst the
more important toils of state,
The counsels
labouring in this patriot soul,
Though Europe
from thy voice expect her fate,
And thy
keen glance extend from pole to pole;
O Chatham,
nursed in ancient virtue’s lore,
To these
sad strains incline a favouring ear;
Think on
the God whom thou, and I adore,
Nor turn
unpitying from the poor man’s prayer.
Pity the
sorrows of a poor old man
Whose trembling
limbs have borne him to your door,
Whose days
are dwindled to the shortest span—
Oh, give
relief, and heaven will bless your store.
Ah me! How
blest was once a peasant’s life!
No lawless
passion swelled my even breast;
Far from
the stormy waves of civil strife
Sound were
my slumber, and my heart at rest
I ne’er for
guilty, painful pleasures roved,
But, taught
by nature, and by choice, to wed,
From all
the hamlet culled whom best I loved;
With her
I stayed my heart, with her my bed.
To gild her
worth I asked no wealthy power—
My toil
could feed her, and my arm defend;
In youth,
or age, in pain, or pleasure’s hour,
The same
fond husband, father, brother, friend.
And she,
the faithful partner of my care,
When ruddy
evening streaked the western sky,
Looked towards
the uplands, if her mate was there,
Or through
the beech word cast an anxious eye;
Then, careful
matron, heaped the ample board
With savoury
herbs, and picked the nicer part
From such
plain food as Nature could afford,
Ere simple
Nature was debauched by Art.
While I,
contented with my homely cheer,
Saw round
my knees my prattling children play;
And oft
with pleased attention sat to hear
The little
history of their idle day.
But ah! How
changed the scene! On the cold stones,
Where wont
at night to blaze the cheerful fire,
Pale famine
sits and counts her naked bones,
Still sighs
for food, still pines with vain desire.
My faithful
wife, with ever-straining eyes,
Hangs on
my bosom her dejected head;
My helpless
infants raise their feeble cries,
And from
their father claim their daily bread,
Dear tender
pledges of my honest love,
On that
bare bed behold your brother lie;
Three tedious
days with pinching want he strove,
The fourth,
I saw the helpless cherub die.
Nor long
shall ye remain. With visage sour
Our tyrant
lord commands us from our home
And, armed
with cruel Law’s coercive power,
Bids me
and mine o’er barren mountains roam.
Yet never,
Chatham, have I passed a day
In Riot’s
orgies, or in idle ease;
Ne’er have
I sacrificed to sport and play
Or wished
a pampered appetite to please.
Hard was
my fate and constant was my toil:
Still with
the morning’s orient light I rose,
Felled the
stout oak, or raised the lofty pile,
Parched
with the sun, in dark December froze.
Is it that
Nature with a niggard hand
Withholds
her gifts from these once-favoured plains?
Has God,
in vengeance to a guilty land,
Sent Dearth
and Famine to her labouring swains?
Ah no; you
hill where daily sweats my brow,
A thousand
flocks, a thousand herds adorn
Yon filed,
where late I drove the painful plough,
Feels all
her acres crowned with wavy corn.
But what
avails that o'er the furrowed soil
In Autumn's
heat the yellow harvests rise
If artificial
want elude my toil
Untasted
plenty wound my craving eyes?
What profits
that at a distance I behold
My wealthy
neighbour's fragrant smoke ascend,
If still
the gripping cormorant withhold
The fruits
which rain and genial seasons send;
If those
fell vipers of the public weal
Yet unrelenting
on our bowels prey;
If still
the curse of penury we feel,
And in the
midst of plenty pine away;
In every
port the vessel rides secure
That wafts
our harvest to a foreign shore,
While we
the pangs of pressing want endure,
The sons
of strangers riot on our store?
O generous
Chatham, stop those fatal sails,
Once more
with outstretched arm thy Britons save;
The unheeding
crew but wait for favouring gales;
O stop theme
ere thy stem Italia's wave.
From thee
alone I hope for instant aid,
'Tis thou
alone canst save my children's breath:
O deem not
little of our cruel meed,
O haste
to help us, for delay is death.
So may nor
Spleen nor Envy blast thy name,
Nor voice
profane thy patriot acts deride;
Still mayest
thou stand the first in honest fame,
Unstung
by Folly, Vanity or Pride.
So may thy
languid limbs with strength be braced,
And glowing
health support thy active soul,
With fair
renown thy public virtue graced,
Far as thou
badest Britannia's thunders roll.
Then joy
to thee, and to thy children peace
The grateful
hind shall drink from Plenty's horn:
And while
they share the cultured land's increase,
The poor
shall bless the day when Pitt was born.
© 2004 The Republic of Pemberley