Chapter 24

By one large window lighted - it was made

For some bold project, some design in trade:

This fail’d, - and one, a humourist in his way,

(Ill was the humour), bought it in decay;

Nor will he sell, repair, or take it down;

’Tis his, - what cares he for the talk of town?

“No! he will let it to the poor; - a home

Where he delights to see the creatures come:”

“They may be thieves;” - “Well, so are richer men;”

“Or idlers, cheats, or prostitutes;” - “What then?”

“Outcasts pursued by justice, vile and base;” -

“They need the more his pity and the place:”

Convert to system his vain mind has built,

He gives asylum to deceit and guilt.

In this vast room, each place by habit fix’d,

Are sexes, families, and ages mix’d -

To union forced by crime, by fear, by need,

And all in morals and in modes agreed;

Some ruin’d men, who from mankind remove;

Some ruin’d females, who yet talk of love;

And some grown old in idleness - the prey

To vicious spleen, still railing through the day;

And need and misery, vice and danger bind,

In sad alliance each degraded mind.

That window view! - oil’d paper and old glass

Stain the strong rays, which, though impeded, pass,

And give a dusty warmth to that huge room,

The conquer’d sunshine’s melancholy gloom;

When all those western rays, without so bright,

Within become a ghastly glimmering light,

As pale and faint upon the floor they fall,

Or feebly gleam on the opposing wall:

That floor, once oak, now pieced with fir unplaned,

Or, where not pieced, in places bored and stain’d;

That wall once whiten’d, now an odious sight,

Stain’d with all hues, except its ancient white;

The only door is fasten’d by a pin,

Or stubborn bar that none may hurry in:

For this poor room, like rooms of greater pride,

At times contains what prudent men would hide.

Where’er the floor allows an even space,

Chalking and marks of various games have place;

Boys, without foresight, pleased in halters swing;

On a fix’d hook men cast a flying ring;

While gin and snuff their female neighbours share,

And the black beverage in the fractured ware.

On swinging shelf are things incongruous stored, -

Scraps of their food, - the cards and cribbage-board, -

With pipes and pouches; while on peg below,

Hang a lost member’s fiddle and its bow;

That still reminds them how he’d dance and play,

Ere sent untimely to the Convicts’ Bay.

Here by a curtain, by a blanket there,

Are various beds conceal’d, but none with care;

Where some by day and some by night, as best

Suit their employments, seek uncertain rest;

The drowsy children at their pleasure creep

To the known crib, and there securely sleep.

Each end contains a grate, and these beside

Are hung utensils for their boil’d and fried -

All used at any hour, by night, by day,

As suit the purse, the person, or the prey.

Above the fire, the mantel-shelf contains

Of china-ware some poor unmatched remains;

There many a tea-cup’s gaudy fragment stands,

All placed by vanity’s unwearied hands;

For here she lives, e’en here she looks about,

To find some small consoling objects out:

Nor heed these Spartan dames their house, not sit

’Mid cares domestic, - they nor sew nor knit;

But of their fate discourse, their ways, their wars,

With arm’d authorities, their ’scapes and scars:

These lead to present evils, and a cup,

If fortune grant it, winds description up.

High hung at either end, and next the wall,

Two ancient mirrors show the forms of all,

In all their force; - these aid them in their dress,

But with the good, the evils too express,

Doubling each look of care, each token of distress.

LETTER XIX.

THE POOR OF THE BOROUGH.

Nam dives qui fieri vult,

Et cito vult fieri; sed quae reverentia legum,

Quis metus, aut pudor est unquam properantis avari?

JUVENAL, Satire xiv.

Nocte brevem si forte indulsit cura soporem,

Et toto versata thoro jam membra quiescunt,

Continuo templum et violati Numinis aras,

Et quod praecipuis mentem suboribus urget,

Te videt in somnis; tua sacra et major imago

Humana turbat pavidum, cogitque fateri.

JUVENAL, Satire xiii.

------------------------

THE PARISH-CLERK.

The Parish-Clerk began his Duties with the late Vicar, a grave and austere Man; one fully orthodox; a Detecter and Opposer of the Wiles of Satan - His opinion of his own Fortitude - The more frail offended by these Professions - His good advice gives further Provocation - They invent stratagems to overcome his Virtue - His Triumph - He is yet not invulnerable: is assaulted by fear of Want, and Avarice - He gradually yields to the Seduction - He reasons with himself, and is persuaded - He offends, but with Terror; repeats his Offence; grows familiar with Crime: is detected - His Sufferings and Death.

WITH our late Vicar, and his age the same,

His clerk, hight Jachin, to his office came;

The like slow speech was his, the like tall slender frame:

But Jachin was the gravest man on ground,

And heard his master’s jokes with look profound;

For worldly wealth this man of letters sigh’d,

And had a sprinkling of the spirit’s pride:

But he was sober, chaste, devout and just,

One whom his neighbours could believe and trust:

Of none suspected, neither man nor maid

By him were wrong’d, or were of him afraid.

There was indeed a frown, a trick of state

In Jachin; - formal was his air and gait:

But if he seem’d more solemn and less kind,

Than some light men to light affairs confined,

Still ’twas allow’d that he should so behave

As in high seat, and be severely grave.

This book-taught man, to man’s first foe profess’d

Defiance stern, and hate that knew not rest;

He held that Satan, since the world began,

In every act, had strife with every man;

That never evil deed on earth was done,

But of the acting parties he was one;

The flattering guide to make ill prospects clear;

To smooth rough ways the constant pioneer;

The ever-tempting, soothing, softening power,

Ready to cheat, seduce, deceive, devour.

“Me has the sly Seducer oft withstood,”

Said pious Jachin, - “but he gets no good;

I pass the house where swings the tempting sign,

And pointing, tell him, ‘Satan, that is thine:’

I pass the damsels pacing down the street,

And look more grave and solemn when we meet;

Nor doth it irk me to rebuke their smiles,

Their wanton ambling and their watchful wiles:

Nay, like the good John Bunyan, when I view

Those forms, I’m angry at the ills they do;

That I could pinch and spoil, in sin’s despite,

Beauties, which frail and evil thoughts excite.

{10}

“At feasts and banquets seldom am I found,

And (save at church) abhor a tuneful sound;

To plays and shows I run not to and fro,

And where my master goes, forbear to go.”

No wonder Satan took the thing amiss,

To be opposed by such a man as this -

A man so grave, important, cautious, wise,

Who dared not trust his feeling or his eyes;

No wonder he should lurk and lie in wait,

Should fit his hooks and ponder on his bait;

Should on his movements keep a watchful eye;

For he pursued a fish who led the fry.

With his own peace our Clerk was not content;

He tried, good man! to make his friends repent.

“Nay, nay, my friends, from inns and taverns fly;

You may suppress your thirst, but not supply:

A foolish proverb says, ‘the devil’s at home;’

But he is there, and tempts in every room:

Men feel, they know not why, such places please;

His are the spells - they’re idleness and ease;

Magic of fatal kind he throws around,

Where care is banish’d, but the heart is bound.

“Think not of beauty; - when a maid you meet,

Turn from her view and step across the street;

Dread all the sex: their looks create a charm,

A smile should fright you and a word alarm:

E’en I myself, with all my watchful care,

Have for an instant felt the insidious snare;

And caught my sinful eyes at the endang’ring stars;

Till I was forced to smite my bounding breast

With forceful blow, and bid the bold-one rest.

“Go not with crowds when they to pleasure run,

But public joy in private safety shun:

When bells, diverted from their true intent,

Ring loud for some deluded mortal sent

To hear or make long speech in parliament;

What time the many, that unruly beast,

Roars its rough joy and shares the final feast?

Then heed my counsel, shut thine ears and eyes;

A few will hear me - for the few are wise.”

Not Satan’s friends, nor Satan’s self could bear,

The cautious man who took of souls such care;

An interloper, - one who, out of place,

Had volunteered upon the side of grace:

There was his master ready once a week

To give advice; what further need he seek?

“Amen, so be it:” - what had he to do

With more than this? - ’twas insolent and new;

And some determined on a way to see

How frail he was, that so it might not be.

First they essay’d to tempt our saint to sin,

By points of doctrine argued at an inn;

Where he might warmly reason, deeply drink,

Then lose all power to argue and to think.

In vain they tried; he took the question up,

Clear’d every doubt, and barely touch’d the cup:

By many a text he proved his doctrine sound,

And look’d in triumph on the tempters round.

Next ’twas their care an artful lass to find,

Who might consult him, as perplex’d in mind;

She they conceived might put her case with fears,

With tender tremblings and seducing tears;

She might such charms of various kind display,

That he would feel their force and melt away:

For why of nymphs such caution and such dread,

Unless he felt, and fear’d to be misled?

She came, she spake: he calmly heard her case,

And plainly told her ’twas a want of grace;

Bade her “such fancies and affections check,

And wear a thicker muslin on her neck.”

Abased, his human foes the combat fled,

And the stern clerk yet higher held his head.

They were indeed a weak, impatient set,

But their shrewd prompter had his engines yet;

Had various means to make a mortal trip,

Who shunn’d a flowing bowl and rosy lip;

And knew a thousand ways his heart to move,

Who flies from banquets and who laughs at love.

Thus far the playful Muse has lent her aid,

But now departs, of graver theme afraid;

Her may we seek in more appropriate time, -

There is no jesting with distress and crime.

Our worthy Clerk had now arrived at fame,

Such as but few in his degree might claim;

But he was poor, and wanted not the sense

That lowly rates the praise without the pence:

He saw the common herd with reverence treat

The weakest burgess whom they chanced to meet;

While few respected his exalted views,

And all beheld his doublet and his shoes:

None, when they meet, would to his parts allow

(Save his poor boys) a hearing or a bow:

To this false judgment of the vulgar mind,

He was not fully, as a saint, resign’d;

He found it much his jealous soul affect,

To fear derision and to find neglect.

The year was bad, the christening-fees were small,

The weddings few, the parties paupers all:

Desire of gain with fear of want combined,

Raised sad commotion in his wounded mind;

Wealth was in all his thoughts, his views, his dreams,

And prompted base desires and baseless schemes.

Alas! how often erring mortals keep

The strongest watch against the foes who sleep;

While the more wakeful, bold, and artful foe

Is suffer’d guardless and unmark’d to go.

Once in a month the sacramental bread

Our Clerk with wine upon the table spread:

The custom this, that as the vicar reads,

He for our off’rings round the church proceeds;

Tall spacious seats the wealthier people hid,

And none had view of what his neighbour did:

Laid on the box and mingled when they fell,

Who should the worth of each oblation tell?

Now as poor Jachin took the usual round,

And saw the alms and heard the metal sound,

He had a thought - at first it was no more

Than - “these have cash and give it to the poor.”

A second thought from this to work began -


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