Oh! Court of Equity, misnamed, where doubtLeads many in; whence few, or none, get out;Where law presides, in semblance, but to mock,—Like priests, that pray round felons on the block;—Where justice sits, with even-handed scale,To shew the heaviest purse,—which must prevail—Where Truth confounded flies, or ne’er is seen,And Falsehood flourishes—an evergreen;—Where foul Corruption keeps his secret cave,And robs the suitor he pretends to save.—Oh! Court, before whose gate, with reddened eyePale Reason stands, and bids each Plaintiff fly;Bids right shake hands with fraud, nor tempt the strife,Begun in sorrow—ending not with life—The legal contest, which may never cease,—A cure perhaps—but worse than the disease—Oh! Court, where dull Procrastination reignsLacking decision—not for want of brains—Which crowds of spectres haunt their doom to knowIn suits commenced two centuries ago—Where all is wrong, and nothing certain, saveA blasted fortune, and an early grave.Behold yon clown, whose frugal care has madeA pretty something in his humble trade;—Fit object now for pillage of the law!—He sells a field;—the vendee finds a flaw—What mean those writings underneath his arm?Why rise those smirks of gratulation warmFrom hungry black-coats,—eager for the prey,—Who crowd the boro’ on a market day—[1]The game is up—around the blood-hounds close,And snuff their victim with prophetic nose.The case he tells most luminously dark,And puzzles (what will not?) each country shark.An action bring, your right at once to tryCries one;—an action bring the rest reply—All to one object with one feeling tend,—Deceit the means, and robbery the end.But how much will it cost? the rustic cries,A song, a song—the ready fox replies—For fifty pounds your battle will be won,The thing, my friend, is clearer than the sun.You know our office, come with me and look,This very point is in the statute book,Confirmed by fifty judges dead and gone,—Each wiser in his time than Solomon—If still from caution sage you fear to err,Resort at once to some King’s Counsellor;His fee’s two guineas—or about the mark—With two and sixpence more to bribe his clerk,Lest on the shelf your case despised should rot,Or lose its turn, and be at last forgot.The Gudgeon bites, and lawyer Grabble gainsAnother Client to reward his pains.A case is drawn, ingrossed, and sent to town,And twelve months after comes th’ opinion down.Ill brooks exhausted Patience such a spell,Tho’ loth to quarrel with the name of Bell.What does he promise failure or success?His words are few, and those one can but guess—Like strange Egyptian characters of yore,Or pot-hooks drawn upon an alehouse door,Or like the scrawls a spider’s legs might trace,When dipt in ink, upon as white a space—[2]“He cannot say, but much inclines to doubt“The vendee’s object will be brought about;“And thinks the vendor has an equal chance,“The law so much depends on circumstance—“He knows not half the facts, so would advise“That all disputes should end in compromise—“But, if the vendor wish his luck to try,“He straight must file a bill in Chancery.”[3]Well have we sped, exulting Grabble shouts,For all is sure, when cautious Johnny doubts—The client nods, uncertain what is meant,And therefore fearful to withhold assent.Forth, with instructions goes the post that eve,And crafty Grabble chuckles in his sleeve—Instructions for a bill, which agents wileBefore the term’s last day may hope to file.How vain that hope!—the dusty papers lieFor eighteen months within the draftsman’s eye.To all complaints he beats the ready chime:—“More weighty matters had beguiled his time—“Injunctions, that would not admit delay,“Answers, demurrers—and the motion day,“All marr’d his wishes to effect dispatch,“Though failing not each leisure hour to snatch.“Vacation comes, and then he will be able“To clear with ease his now o’erloaded table.”[4]Vacation past;—the agent calls again,And finds the draftsman just returned from Spain.The soot-clad parcel lies unopened still,Knaw’d by the rats, that hunger else would kill—At last ’tis done, and then it must be sentTo country down for final settlement.Then queries on the margin rise, like apes,—And here and there a long hiatus gapes.Facts change like mortals in a fairy tale,And from a herring fancy coins a whale.Then crowds of thrice repeated words expressWhat might be done in twenty thousand less;—The whole one precious jargon, fitted wellTo serve for fewel in a lawyer’s hell.But what says Grabble?—as the folios mount,He must demand some money on account,[5]To pay the counsel and the court their fees,Lest justice’ wheels be clogg’d for want of grease.The client deep into his pocket dives;To part with cash his inmost bowel rives;With deep-drawn sighs he counts each stiver o’er,And deems the law a most infernal bore.What gall’d already? not so quick, my friend,Or rage will turn to madness in the end.Who takes a voyage but expects to beAnnoy’d at first by sickness on the sea?Should weak impatience make him growl and weep,His friends would laugh, and bid him shun the deep.Aye, shun, but how? why look before you leap.When once embark’d, no more can wisdom say;Endure the billows, bluster as they may.But to proceed. The draft by Grabble’s penRevised, must travel back to town again;Again must be, neglected as before,On draftman’s desk for fifteen months or more;Again must wander o’er the self-same trackFrom town to country, and from country back.At last ’tis settled: then must clerks beginTo cut, prepare, and rule the parchment skin;Then will their zeal demand an overpay,And turn, for expedition, night to day,T’ ingross, examine, file;—another weekAt least ’twill take; subpœnas then bespeak.The seal is shut, and, if you wish them soon,It must be open’d by a special boon—The sum two guineas[6]. Eldon! fie, for shame!Nay, truth’s a libel, spare his lordship’s fame.His wants are many, and his stipend clearScarce mounts to forty thousand pounds a year.’Tis said, that justice to each subject downFlows in a stream untainted from the crown.Then say, can kings for justice gold demand?If not, why claims that right a meaner hand?As well to Peter might a bribe be givenFor keeping (not the seals) but keys of heav’n!Defendant serv’d, five months must pass, or near,Before the law compels him to appear;For like some barren tree deprived of fruit,In long vacation is a country suit;Or, like a vessel by receding tide,Left helpless on the shore, where it must bideTill tracing back its course the stream once more shall glide.Term come, then try the process of contempt,If still defendant should delay attempt.Seal an attachment; bear the rogue to goal,And hope your efforts may at last prevail.But ah! what sadness clouds that altered mein?What, if at large the stubborn foe is seen?—His freedom gained, he pays the whole expense—Not so, the practice is a vile pretence.The greater loss from wrong to right rebounds;Ten shillings his, and thine as many pounds.[7]Appearance entered, but renews the sport;Demand an answer by the clerk in court.He calls, like Glendower for a magic bandOf Ocean sprites, that come not at command.He calls once more in peremptory terms and clear;But none so deaf as those who will not hear.[8]At length an order comes,—if sharp the spur—For six weeks time to answer, plead, demur.Thus to some famish’d dog, that asks a bone,Derision throws with scorn the flinty stone:He seeks but little, and that little soughtWith eagerness, when gain’d, amounts to nought.’Tis all a mockery from first to last;—Wait must the Plaintiff, and the mongrel fast.Six weeks are gone—once more the game’s alive;Once more for breath must the Defendant strive.Hark! thro’ the purlieus dark of Chancery LaneThe dogs are roused,—the chase begins again,—Again delay pursues its wonted chime,—And claims at last another rule for time.Why should I pause on points like these to dwell?By such detail my pages idly swell?The process slow and unrepaid the toil—A worthless harvest in a barren soil.The answer filed—three years at least fulfilTheir circling round since Wakefield[9]drew the bill.Then streams of lengthy dull exceptions flowWhich Koe must sign to humour Jemmy Lowe.[10]Amendments next that leave behind no traceOf first complaint;—but make a novel case—Continual reference to the Masters, whoMust have the wit to cut a hair in two;So nicely drawn, so fine the point betweenWhat it should not, or what it should have been.Here Captain Cross[11]assumes despotic swayEnraged at all who dare his speech gainsay.Once mighty ruler of a tamer crew,Than ever Ballot from the plough-tail drew;Like Falstaff’s scarecrows—ragged, spare, and tall,—Himself the greatest scarecrow of them all.Oh! fortune, thou art but a fickle flirt!For me why sprawl’d not Eldon in the dirt?His carriage oft has passed me thro’ the town,But then alas! fate would not break it down.Oh! fortune, all thy favors are but dross,Or why bestow them on a man like Cross?Thy modes are various, as thy whim is strange;Or why a soldier to a lawyer change—If such great merit must promotion get,’Twere easy sure to add an epaulet.There long he might have shined in native light,At least a bully, if afraid to fight.Oh! Master Cross, resume thy martial post,Or deign in pity to give up the ghost.Thy luckless errors never falling right,Involve the suitors in perpetual night.Thy brain’s dark chaos working like a mole,Directs each action, and pervades the whole;Oh! may it have just sense enough to seeThat all is truth the muse has said of thee!Here Cox[12], of foundling babes the foster sire,Humane of temper, but too prone to fire,In judgment sits to act by reason’s rule;Yet ever proves of prejudice the tool.A look, a word mistaken, gives offence,And thoughts distorted take the place of sense.Some angry crotchet gets into his brain,Hatched in caprice, and nurtured by disdain.Persuasion fails to shew how warp’d his mind;When anger rules, the soul itself is blind:Confirmed by habit all his faults increase,So let him mend, or else depart in peace.Lo! waddling forth; in dignity of mein,Corporeal Stratford[13]from his haunt is seen.That bloated form and pompous belly scan;In shape and wit a very alderman!Those vulgar looks his vulgar manners stamp,For knowledge he ne’er burns the midnight lamp.The sternest brute will sometimes kindness own,Bend as you will, and Stratford yet will frown;Enrag’d, he fain would kill you with a look,Ye weak of skull, beware the flying book.Hence to the rocky woods, thou growling bear,Hence to the woods, and deal out justice there.Hence to the woods; but ’ere thou dost escape,Send to supply thy loss a real ape.The suitors scarce will of their lot complain,If by the change some intellect they gain.Like thee, in gestures may his rage be dealt;Like thee, the luckless volumes he may pelt;Each art expressive of the monkey tribe,Well hast thou learnt their natures to imbibe!Next canting Stephen[14]in his study see,—Himself a slave, devising blacks to free.Better endure the planters iron swayThan pore on musty tomes the livelong day!Better for stolen ease to bear the rack,Than spend a life in one dull gloomy track!No negro thou! what more when all is said?He works by force, and you perhaps for bread.The toil of both may prove a public good,—Another’s profit, or another’s food.But let me pass thy faults, if such they be—And turn to one redeeming quality—Well hast thou done to curb thy thirsty scribeFrom taking what in truth is but a bribe;A bribe, which those, who dole with sparing hand,But little zeal of service can command.Well hast thou done such odious spoil to slake!An equal theft in those who give or take!Nor yet forgotten is thy sleepy power,Long-winded, doting, vain, capricious Trower[15].Some share of patience to the speaker lend,Or useless every wish to comprehend!Why wilt thou puzzle each half-witted elf,By keeping all the converse to thyself?Why wilt thou rave, till boggling in a mist,Thou raisest points, which but in air exist—Approve to day, to-morrow find a flaw—And own at last that neither is the law.Where are thy tubs, thy dirty smocks and gin?Thy trade is washing, hence and take it in.But turn my muse; it boots not more to traceThese petty judges of Southampton Place.Such office should some wiser head employThan driveling dotard or unlearned boy—The first a friend to Eldon’s childhood dear,—The last a son of ministerial peer.Alike unskilled they wander in the dark,And stoop at last to counsel with their clerk.Some dirty scribbler in a garret bred,Thence taught by charity to write and read.A wretched dolt, who gains his place by chance,And takes promotion as his years advance;Who now forsooth must act with scorn to those,That pay him meanly, or his will oppose.Thus Pugh and Hone[16], and many more I know—But these the worst,—I spare each meaner foe.Still are there some this station doom’d to fill,Who shame their masters by superior skill,In Kensit’s[17]talent all a refuge findFrom the dark nothingness of Stratford’s mind;And when at Cross the sense indignant groans,It seeks for solace in thy kindness, Jones.Fortune! from thee one favour let me crave!Debase each tyrant, and exalt each slave!Let those, who now ride topmost on thy wheel,The sad reverse of bitter thraldom feel;Look up to those on whom they now look down,And learn the terror of a despot’s frown.Erroneous judgment breeds a like report,And both will bear revision by the court;Then must the cause experience more delay,Last in the list that lengthens every day.What if his Honor, after two long years,Decide the question that he never hears!Before the Vice or Rolls, it matters notHow heard or judged; alike the suitors lot.From either sentence you may take appeals,If faulty deemed, to him who holds the seals;Then will some paltry point, of little worthTo him who doubts, or him who gave it birth,Enchain the suit for ages, like a spell,From which Impatience will in vain rebel;Alas! my lord, yon starving paupers see!How can they live upon a bare term fee?Let still the client all his pangs endure,But for thy brother tribe provide a cure.Be Lord High Chancellor, if so you must,But oh! resign some portion of thy trust—Its various duties more attention claimThan one weak head can muster for the same.Young Peer[18], be wise, and if you court success,Outdo your senior[19]by attempting less.His failure served great talents to produce;But what is intellect if not of use?Well could he coin a doubt, or problem make—But slow to solve, and there was his mistake.His brains were sound; but little good they did.Like some rich jewel in dark cavern hid.Quick was his mind each error to perceive;—Much craft had those who could that mind deceive—A moment’s thought would often shew a flaw,Which those who look’d much deeper never saw.Well was he skill’d to crack a wretched jest,And all who laughed were sure to be caress’d.He bore no rival in his high career,As Leach[20]can tell, at whom he lov’d to sneer;—To Flattery he yielded blind assent;On those who blam’d him hate itself was spent;This Brougham[21]has felt,—tho’ all his merit own,Deprived by malice of a silken gown.And yet his visage, like a crocodileIntending mischief, still could wear the smile.Oft times a tear-drop down his cheek would flow,While aged victims told their tale of woe—Told of their hopes delay’d and run to waste,With wealth before them, which they could not taste—Told of their starving babes and buried wife,—Themselves just tottering on the brink of life.Then would he clasp his hands with false intent,And call on heaven to witness what he meant,With promise send the discontent away,—Their judgment certain on a future day.It comes—again he feigns the ready tear,—As God’s his judge, the papers are not here—Where can they be?—his careful wife[22]perhapsHas torn the dusty lumber into scraps.Mishap unfortunate! the suitor cries,His Lordship nods assent, and wipes his eyesWith ’kerchief clean, in which a potent leakDraws from each orb the stream that wets his cheek.“Alas! my lord, when will the judgment come?—“Send me the papers, and I’ll take them home.”The papers got, be sure to hand them in,Tho’ Hand[23]to take them deem it half a sin,And swears the mass now in his Lordship’s houseHas left no cranny for the smallest mouse.This all results from pre-concerted plan;The master trifles, why should not his man;Excuse, the judgment day by day protracts,His mind still wavering, or forgot the facts;And yet he seems not unabashed by shame,Thus forced in self-defence the lie to frame.As carelessly around his glance he throws,Each eye takes shelter underneath his brows,Then with apparent calmness in the face,He strives to meet you, but ’tis all grimace;Look as he will, the thinking mind can seeHe half detests his own duplicity;Shrinks from the gaze of those who weep around,And in his bosom feels a deeper wound.Oft have I marked him in an inward trance,And watched the changes of his countenance;Thus have I seen, or fancied to have seen,Remorse and terror painted on his mein:Remorse for mischief done at best in sloth,And terror; but how short the reign of both,More lively feelings soon his grief restrain,And heartless Eldon is himself again.Albeit, when thieves in penitence beginTo weep their guilty deeds, and fly from sin,The world oft profits by their former vice,Should chance enroll them in the state police;They follow crime as some old fox might do,Who hunted once, another should pursue,Woe to the wretch, that struggles to evadeThe wary cunning of such renegade;In vain each wile, each mazy turn he tries,For justice triumphs, and the culprit dies.So hopes the world that Eldon, now resigned,Will own the faults to which his eyes were blind;Chase out corruption from his dark abode,And cleanse each path where fraud the usurper strode;Thus may he by that dying act effaceThe burning stigma of a life’s disgrace.Shrink not, my lord, whate’er the muse appears,She wars but feebly with declining years;Compassion fetters what she fain would sing,And robs severity of half its sting:Those hoary locks command respect from youth,But cannot wholly close the lips of truth.Suppose the judgment given[24]; but after yearsOf endless labour, and a million tears:Suppose the minutes by his lordship’s scrawlDrawn out and settled, after many a brawl;Wherein loquacious Agar[25]bears the bell—An empty clapper in a brazen shell.Hark! how the frothy nonsense from his lipsInvolves the audience in one black eclipse,From which in vain they struggle to be free.When darkness triumphs, who can hope to see?Gods! what a tongue, and what a lack of wits!How well the former with the latter sits!In him the worst of causes finds a friend;He tears to tatters what he cannot mend.But still his eloquence is most sublime,In points of practice and in tricks for time;In petty motions for some end absurd,To please his Frowd, or gratify his Hurd.When broken down, he next resorts to lies,Disputes another’s word, his own denies,Insists that all the law is on his sideAnd Truth proclaims a perjured Suicide!When on his legs, ’tis hard to get him down,Tho’ counsel cough, and oft his Lordship frown.He bungles on; while dulness weaves a wreatheTo crown his head when fairly out of breath,—A wreath of poppies mingled with night-bane,That once asleep, he ne’er may wake again.Blest consummation! may it happen soon,Or those, who hear, will first essay, the boon.Agar farewell, but ere I cease to greetLet me conduct thee to thy country seat.Abode of taste, where all the graces shine,—The prospect charming, and the site divine!The road that leads from Battle Bridge pursueTo Kentish Town, and keep a dexter view;There mark the walls of many coloured-brick,With here and there a withered poplar stick.A dirty gate straight walks of gravel shews,The new canal around in silence flows;Its fetid waters, stinking as they pass,Contend in sweetness with the scent of gas.Here Pancras rears it’s charitable dome,There limekilns smoke, and cloud the air in gloom;Wheree’r you wander, or the sight divert,One scene prevails of darkness, stench, and dirt.Well in one picture might the muse recordHow fine the mansion, and how wise it’s lord.Ye passengers! who from the road admire,Let no wild transports tempt you to go nigher;The rights of soil he zealously protectsBy transportation, as the law directs!Not mine the purpose step by step to shewWhat makes the progress of a cause more slow:Nor yet to trace the current of expenseThrough all its mazes, but the whole condense.The same complaints through all the system fly;—Thus what I censure will to all apply.Omit each intermediate step, and seeThe cause at last from all incumbrance free,And brought to issue;—then let Spence[26]prepareInterrogations for your friends to swear.Propose each question so distinctly nice,That all may keep within it, like a vice;For should some idle word escape, who knowsBut it might prove more fatal than from foes?Avoid the hostile camp, and, if you can,Before he speaks, examine well your man;Teach him the lesson he has got to learn,And let him thoroughly his cue discern;Hold out large promise, if he meet your will,And ere he comes to swear his belly fill.If still reluctant, coax him with a bribe,Persuading all—but most the Jewish tribe.To strike commissioners is next the thing,Four names a piece let either party bring;Then from the four let each their two erase;Seal quick the dedimus, and name a place;Bespeak provision for a month at least,And call your brother tigers to the feast;So may they well that courtesy repayBy like invite upon a future day!Of wine be careful to secure a stock—Port, Champagne, Claret, Burgundy, and Hock.Your guns arrange, call out your steeds and dogs,For too much toil the mental action clogs.[27]What—if to keep your trust an oath be given;Secure of hell, no longer think of heaven;Enjoy the goods that knavery has sent,And laugh and revel to your heart’s content.One day with opening the commission fill;The next, with prefatory measures kill;The third, discuss what will not question bear;The fourth, for relaxation course a hare.But why thus hunt a subject off it’s legs?I do but teach my grandam to suck eggs:—An art attornies practice far too well,—Yoke white, their own—a client takes the shell.What if he grumble, theirs has been the toil,With profit scarce to make the kettle boil.A porter’s lot would suit them better far;No anxious cares his peaceful dream can mar;While their reward for nightly want of ease,Just adds a pint of ale to bread and cheese.
Oh! Court of Equity, misnamed, where doubtLeads many in; whence few, or none, get out;Where law presides, in semblance, but to mock,—Like priests, that pray round felons on the block;—Where justice sits, with even-handed scale,To shew the heaviest purse,—which must prevail—Where Truth confounded flies, or ne’er is seen,And Falsehood flourishes—an evergreen;—Where foul Corruption keeps his secret cave,And robs the suitor he pretends to save.—Oh! Court, before whose gate, with reddened eyePale Reason stands, and bids each Plaintiff fly;Bids right shake hands with fraud, nor tempt the strife,Begun in sorrow—ending not with life—The legal contest, which may never cease,—A cure perhaps—but worse than the disease—Oh! Court, where dull Procrastination reignsLacking decision—not for want of brains—Which crowds of spectres haunt their doom to knowIn suits commenced two centuries ago—Where all is wrong, and nothing certain, saveA blasted fortune, and an early grave.Behold yon clown, whose frugal care has madeA pretty something in his humble trade;—Fit object now for pillage of the law!—He sells a field;—the vendee finds a flaw—What mean those writings underneath his arm?Why rise those smirks of gratulation warmFrom hungry black-coats,—eager for the prey,—Who crowd the boro’ on a market day—[1]The game is up—around the blood-hounds close,And snuff their victim with prophetic nose.The case he tells most luminously dark,And puzzles (what will not?) each country shark.An action bring, your right at once to tryCries one;—an action bring the rest reply—All to one object with one feeling tend,—Deceit the means, and robbery the end.But how much will it cost? the rustic cries,A song, a song—the ready fox replies—For fifty pounds your battle will be won,The thing, my friend, is clearer than the sun.You know our office, come with me and look,This very point is in the statute book,Confirmed by fifty judges dead and gone,—Each wiser in his time than Solomon—If still from caution sage you fear to err,Resort at once to some King’s Counsellor;His fee’s two guineas—or about the mark—With two and sixpence more to bribe his clerk,Lest on the shelf your case despised should rot,Or lose its turn, and be at last forgot.The Gudgeon bites, and lawyer Grabble gainsAnother Client to reward his pains.A case is drawn, ingrossed, and sent to town,And twelve months after comes th’ opinion down.Ill brooks exhausted Patience such a spell,Tho’ loth to quarrel with the name of Bell.What does he promise failure or success?His words are few, and those one can but guess—Like strange Egyptian characters of yore,Or pot-hooks drawn upon an alehouse door,Or like the scrawls a spider’s legs might trace,When dipt in ink, upon as white a space—[2]“He cannot say, but much inclines to doubt“The vendee’s object will be brought about;“And thinks the vendor has an equal chance,“The law so much depends on circumstance—“He knows not half the facts, so would advise“That all disputes should end in compromise—“But, if the vendor wish his luck to try,“He straight must file a bill in Chancery.”[3]Well have we sped, exulting Grabble shouts,For all is sure, when cautious Johnny doubts—The client nods, uncertain what is meant,And therefore fearful to withhold assent.Forth, with instructions goes the post that eve,And crafty Grabble chuckles in his sleeve—Instructions for a bill, which agents wileBefore the term’s last day may hope to file.How vain that hope!—the dusty papers lieFor eighteen months within the draftsman’s eye.To all complaints he beats the ready chime:—“More weighty matters had beguiled his time—“Injunctions, that would not admit delay,“Answers, demurrers—and the motion day,“All marr’d his wishes to effect dispatch,“Though failing not each leisure hour to snatch.“Vacation comes, and then he will be able“To clear with ease his now o’erloaded table.”[4]Vacation past;—the agent calls again,And finds the draftsman just returned from Spain.The soot-clad parcel lies unopened still,Knaw’d by the rats, that hunger else would kill—At last ’tis done, and then it must be sentTo country down for final settlement.Then queries on the margin rise, like apes,—And here and there a long hiatus gapes.Facts change like mortals in a fairy tale,And from a herring fancy coins a whale.Then crowds of thrice repeated words expressWhat might be done in twenty thousand less;—The whole one precious jargon, fitted wellTo serve for fewel in a lawyer’s hell.But what says Grabble?—as the folios mount,He must demand some money on account,[5]To pay the counsel and the court their fees,Lest justice’ wheels be clogg’d for want of grease.The client deep into his pocket dives;To part with cash his inmost bowel rives;With deep-drawn sighs he counts each stiver o’er,And deems the law a most infernal bore.What gall’d already? not so quick, my friend,Or rage will turn to madness in the end.Who takes a voyage but expects to beAnnoy’d at first by sickness on the sea?Should weak impatience make him growl and weep,His friends would laugh, and bid him shun the deep.Aye, shun, but how? why look before you leap.When once embark’d, no more can wisdom say;Endure the billows, bluster as they may.But to proceed. The draft by Grabble’s penRevised, must travel back to town again;Again must be, neglected as before,On draftman’s desk for fifteen months or more;Again must wander o’er the self-same trackFrom town to country, and from country back.At last ’tis settled: then must clerks beginTo cut, prepare, and rule the parchment skin;Then will their zeal demand an overpay,And turn, for expedition, night to day,T’ ingross, examine, file;—another weekAt least ’twill take; subpœnas then bespeak.The seal is shut, and, if you wish them soon,It must be open’d by a special boon—The sum two guineas[6]. Eldon! fie, for shame!Nay, truth’s a libel, spare his lordship’s fame.His wants are many, and his stipend clearScarce mounts to forty thousand pounds a year.’Tis said, that justice to each subject downFlows in a stream untainted from the crown.Then say, can kings for justice gold demand?If not, why claims that right a meaner hand?As well to Peter might a bribe be givenFor keeping (not the seals) but keys of heav’n!Defendant serv’d, five months must pass, or near,Before the law compels him to appear;For like some barren tree deprived of fruit,In long vacation is a country suit;Or, like a vessel by receding tide,Left helpless on the shore, where it must bideTill tracing back its course the stream once more shall glide.Term come, then try the process of contempt,If still defendant should delay attempt.Seal an attachment; bear the rogue to goal,And hope your efforts may at last prevail.But ah! what sadness clouds that altered mein?What, if at large the stubborn foe is seen?—His freedom gained, he pays the whole expense—Not so, the practice is a vile pretence.The greater loss from wrong to right rebounds;Ten shillings his, and thine as many pounds.[7]Appearance entered, but renews the sport;Demand an answer by the clerk in court.He calls, like Glendower for a magic bandOf Ocean sprites, that come not at command.He calls once more in peremptory terms and clear;But none so deaf as those who will not hear.[8]At length an order comes,—if sharp the spur—For six weeks time to answer, plead, demur.Thus to some famish’d dog, that asks a bone,Derision throws with scorn the flinty stone:He seeks but little, and that little soughtWith eagerness, when gain’d, amounts to nought.’Tis all a mockery from first to last;—Wait must the Plaintiff, and the mongrel fast.Six weeks are gone—once more the game’s alive;Once more for breath must the Defendant strive.Hark! thro’ the purlieus dark of Chancery LaneThe dogs are roused,—the chase begins again,—Again delay pursues its wonted chime,—And claims at last another rule for time.Why should I pause on points like these to dwell?By such detail my pages idly swell?The process slow and unrepaid the toil—A worthless harvest in a barren soil.The answer filed—three years at least fulfilTheir circling round since Wakefield[9]drew the bill.Then streams of lengthy dull exceptions flowWhich Koe must sign to humour Jemmy Lowe.[10]Amendments next that leave behind no traceOf first complaint;—but make a novel case—Continual reference to the Masters, whoMust have the wit to cut a hair in two;So nicely drawn, so fine the point betweenWhat it should not, or what it should have been.Here Captain Cross[11]assumes despotic swayEnraged at all who dare his speech gainsay.Once mighty ruler of a tamer crew,Than ever Ballot from the plough-tail drew;Like Falstaff’s scarecrows—ragged, spare, and tall,—Himself the greatest scarecrow of them all.Oh! fortune, thou art but a fickle flirt!For me why sprawl’d not Eldon in the dirt?His carriage oft has passed me thro’ the town,But then alas! fate would not break it down.Oh! fortune, all thy favors are but dross,Or why bestow them on a man like Cross?Thy modes are various, as thy whim is strange;Or why a soldier to a lawyer change—If such great merit must promotion get,’Twere easy sure to add an epaulet.There long he might have shined in native light,At least a bully, if afraid to fight.Oh! Master Cross, resume thy martial post,Or deign in pity to give up the ghost.Thy luckless errors never falling right,Involve the suitors in perpetual night.Thy brain’s dark chaos working like a mole,Directs each action, and pervades the whole;Oh! may it have just sense enough to seeThat all is truth the muse has said of thee!Here Cox[12], of foundling babes the foster sire,Humane of temper, but too prone to fire,In judgment sits to act by reason’s rule;Yet ever proves of prejudice the tool.A look, a word mistaken, gives offence,And thoughts distorted take the place of sense.Some angry crotchet gets into his brain,Hatched in caprice, and nurtured by disdain.Persuasion fails to shew how warp’d his mind;When anger rules, the soul itself is blind:Confirmed by habit all his faults increase,So let him mend, or else depart in peace.Lo! waddling forth; in dignity of mein,Corporeal Stratford[13]from his haunt is seen.That bloated form and pompous belly scan;In shape and wit a very alderman!Those vulgar looks his vulgar manners stamp,For knowledge he ne’er burns the midnight lamp.The sternest brute will sometimes kindness own,Bend as you will, and Stratford yet will frown;Enrag’d, he fain would kill you with a look,Ye weak of skull, beware the flying book.Hence to the rocky woods, thou growling bear,Hence to the woods, and deal out justice there.Hence to the woods; but ’ere thou dost escape,Send to supply thy loss a real ape.The suitors scarce will of their lot complain,If by the change some intellect they gain.Like thee, in gestures may his rage be dealt;Like thee, the luckless volumes he may pelt;Each art expressive of the monkey tribe,Well hast thou learnt their natures to imbibe!Next canting Stephen[14]in his study see,—Himself a slave, devising blacks to free.Better endure the planters iron swayThan pore on musty tomes the livelong day!Better for stolen ease to bear the rack,Than spend a life in one dull gloomy track!No negro thou! what more when all is said?He works by force, and you perhaps for bread.The toil of both may prove a public good,—Another’s profit, or another’s food.But let me pass thy faults, if such they be—And turn to one redeeming quality—Well hast thou done to curb thy thirsty scribeFrom taking what in truth is but a bribe;A bribe, which those, who dole with sparing hand,But little zeal of service can command.Well hast thou done such odious spoil to slake!An equal theft in those who give or take!Nor yet forgotten is thy sleepy power,Long-winded, doting, vain, capricious Trower[15].Some share of patience to the speaker lend,Or useless every wish to comprehend!Why wilt thou puzzle each half-witted elf,By keeping all the converse to thyself?Why wilt thou rave, till boggling in a mist,Thou raisest points, which but in air exist—Approve to day, to-morrow find a flaw—And own at last that neither is the law.Where are thy tubs, thy dirty smocks and gin?Thy trade is washing, hence and take it in.But turn my muse; it boots not more to traceThese petty judges of Southampton Place.Such office should some wiser head employThan driveling dotard or unlearned boy—The first a friend to Eldon’s childhood dear,—The last a son of ministerial peer.Alike unskilled they wander in the dark,And stoop at last to counsel with their clerk.Some dirty scribbler in a garret bred,Thence taught by charity to write and read.A wretched dolt, who gains his place by chance,And takes promotion as his years advance;Who now forsooth must act with scorn to those,That pay him meanly, or his will oppose.Thus Pugh and Hone[16], and many more I know—But these the worst,—I spare each meaner foe.Still are there some this station doom’d to fill,Who shame their masters by superior skill,In Kensit’s[17]talent all a refuge findFrom the dark nothingness of Stratford’s mind;And when at Cross the sense indignant groans,It seeks for solace in thy kindness, Jones.Fortune! from thee one favour let me crave!Debase each tyrant, and exalt each slave!Let those, who now ride topmost on thy wheel,The sad reverse of bitter thraldom feel;Look up to those on whom they now look down,And learn the terror of a despot’s frown.Erroneous judgment breeds a like report,And both will bear revision by the court;Then must the cause experience more delay,Last in the list that lengthens every day.What if his Honor, after two long years,Decide the question that he never hears!Before the Vice or Rolls, it matters notHow heard or judged; alike the suitors lot.From either sentence you may take appeals,If faulty deemed, to him who holds the seals;Then will some paltry point, of little worthTo him who doubts, or him who gave it birth,Enchain the suit for ages, like a spell,From which Impatience will in vain rebel;Alas! my lord, yon starving paupers see!How can they live upon a bare term fee?Let still the client all his pangs endure,But for thy brother tribe provide a cure.Be Lord High Chancellor, if so you must,But oh! resign some portion of thy trust—Its various duties more attention claimThan one weak head can muster for the same.Young Peer[18], be wise, and if you court success,Outdo your senior[19]by attempting less.His failure served great talents to produce;But what is intellect if not of use?Well could he coin a doubt, or problem make—But slow to solve, and there was his mistake.His brains were sound; but little good they did.Like some rich jewel in dark cavern hid.Quick was his mind each error to perceive;—Much craft had those who could that mind deceive—A moment’s thought would often shew a flaw,Which those who look’d much deeper never saw.Well was he skill’d to crack a wretched jest,And all who laughed were sure to be caress’d.He bore no rival in his high career,As Leach[20]can tell, at whom he lov’d to sneer;—To Flattery he yielded blind assent;On those who blam’d him hate itself was spent;This Brougham[21]has felt,—tho’ all his merit own,Deprived by malice of a silken gown.And yet his visage, like a crocodileIntending mischief, still could wear the smile.Oft times a tear-drop down his cheek would flow,While aged victims told their tale of woe—Told of their hopes delay’d and run to waste,With wealth before them, which they could not taste—Told of their starving babes and buried wife,—Themselves just tottering on the brink of life.Then would he clasp his hands with false intent,And call on heaven to witness what he meant,With promise send the discontent away,—Their judgment certain on a future day.It comes—again he feigns the ready tear,—As God’s his judge, the papers are not here—Where can they be?—his careful wife[22]perhapsHas torn the dusty lumber into scraps.Mishap unfortunate! the suitor cries,His Lordship nods assent, and wipes his eyesWith ’kerchief clean, in which a potent leakDraws from each orb the stream that wets his cheek.“Alas! my lord, when will the judgment come?—“Send me the papers, and I’ll take them home.”The papers got, be sure to hand them in,Tho’ Hand[23]to take them deem it half a sin,And swears the mass now in his Lordship’s houseHas left no cranny for the smallest mouse.This all results from pre-concerted plan;The master trifles, why should not his man;Excuse, the judgment day by day protracts,His mind still wavering, or forgot the facts;And yet he seems not unabashed by shame,Thus forced in self-defence the lie to frame.As carelessly around his glance he throws,Each eye takes shelter underneath his brows,Then with apparent calmness in the face,He strives to meet you, but ’tis all grimace;Look as he will, the thinking mind can seeHe half detests his own duplicity;Shrinks from the gaze of those who weep around,And in his bosom feels a deeper wound.Oft have I marked him in an inward trance,And watched the changes of his countenance;Thus have I seen, or fancied to have seen,Remorse and terror painted on his mein:Remorse for mischief done at best in sloth,And terror; but how short the reign of both,More lively feelings soon his grief restrain,And heartless Eldon is himself again.Albeit, when thieves in penitence beginTo weep their guilty deeds, and fly from sin,The world oft profits by their former vice,Should chance enroll them in the state police;They follow crime as some old fox might do,Who hunted once, another should pursue,Woe to the wretch, that struggles to evadeThe wary cunning of such renegade;In vain each wile, each mazy turn he tries,For justice triumphs, and the culprit dies.So hopes the world that Eldon, now resigned,Will own the faults to which his eyes were blind;Chase out corruption from his dark abode,And cleanse each path where fraud the usurper strode;Thus may he by that dying act effaceThe burning stigma of a life’s disgrace.Shrink not, my lord, whate’er the muse appears,She wars but feebly with declining years;Compassion fetters what she fain would sing,And robs severity of half its sting:Those hoary locks command respect from youth,But cannot wholly close the lips of truth.Suppose the judgment given[24]; but after yearsOf endless labour, and a million tears:Suppose the minutes by his lordship’s scrawlDrawn out and settled, after many a brawl;Wherein loquacious Agar[25]bears the bell—An empty clapper in a brazen shell.Hark! how the frothy nonsense from his lipsInvolves the audience in one black eclipse,From which in vain they struggle to be free.When darkness triumphs, who can hope to see?Gods! what a tongue, and what a lack of wits!How well the former with the latter sits!In him the worst of causes finds a friend;He tears to tatters what he cannot mend.But still his eloquence is most sublime,In points of practice and in tricks for time;In petty motions for some end absurd,To please his Frowd, or gratify his Hurd.When broken down, he next resorts to lies,Disputes another’s word, his own denies,Insists that all the law is on his sideAnd Truth proclaims a perjured Suicide!When on his legs, ’tis hard to get him down,Tho’ counsel cough, and oft his Lordship frown.He bungles on; while dulness weaves a wreatheTo crown his head when fairly out of breath,—A wreath of poppies mingled with night-bane,That once asleep, he ne’er may wake again.Blest consummation! may it happen soon,Or those, who hear, will first essay, the boon.Agar farewell, but ere I cease to greetLet me conduct thee to thy country seat.Abode of taste, where all the graces shine,—The prospect charming, and the site divine!The road that leads from Battle Bridge pursueTo Kentish Town, and keep a dexter view;There mark the walls of many coloured-brick,With here and there a withered poplar stick.A dirty gate straight walks of gravel shews,The new canal around in silence flows;Its fetid waters, stinking as they pass,Contend in sweetness with the scent of gas.Here Pancras rears it’s charitable dome,There limekilns smoke, and cloud the air in gloom;Wheree’r you wander, or the sight divert,One scene prevails of darkness, stench, and dirt.Well in one picture might the muse recordHow fine the mansion, and how wise it’s lord.Ye passengers! who from the road admire,Let no wild transports tempt you to go nigher;The rights of soil he zealously protectsBy transportation, as the law directs!Not mine the purpose step by step to shewWhat makes the progress of a cause more slow:Nor yet to trace the current of expenseThrough all its mazes, but the whole condense.The same complaints through all the system fly;—Thus what I censure will to all apply.Omit each intermediate step, and seeThe cause at last from all incumbrance free,And brought to issue;—then let Spence[26]prepareInterrogations for your friends to swear.Propose each question so distinctly nice,That all may keep within it, like a vice;For should some idle word escape, who knowsBut it might prove more fatal than from foes?Avoid the hostile camp, and, if you can,Before he speaks, examine well your man;Teach him the lesson he has got to learn,And let him thoroughly his cue discern;Hold out large promise, if he meet your will,And ere he comes to swear his belly fill.If still reluctant, coax him with a bribe,Persuading all—but most the Jewish tribe.To strike commissioners is next the thing,Four names a piece let either party bring;Then from the four let each their two erase;Seal quick the dedimus, and name a place;Bespeak provision for a month at least,And call your brother tigers to the feast;So may they well that courtesy repayBy like invite upon a future day!Of wine be careful to secure a stock—Port, Champagne, Claret, Burgundy, and Hock.Your guns arrange, call out your steeds and dogs,For too much toil the mental action clogs.[27]What—if to keep your trust an oath be given;Secure of hell, no longer think of heaven;Enjoy the goods that knavery has sent,And laugh and revel to your heart’s content.One day with opening the commission fill;The next, with prefatory measures kill;The third, discuss what will not question bear;The fourth, for relaxation course a hare.But why thus hunt a subject off it’s legs?I do but teach my grandam to suck eggs:—An art attornies practice far too well,—Yoke white, their own—a client takes the shell.What if he grumble, theirs has been the toil,With profit scarce to make the kettle boil.A porter’s lot would suit them better far;No anxious cares his peaceful dream can mar;While their reward for nightly want of ease,Just adds a pint of ale to bread and cheese.
Oh! Court of Equity, misnamed, where doubtLeads many in; whence few, or none, get out;Where law presides, in semblance, but to mock,—Like priests, that pray round felons on the block;—Where justice sits, with even-handed scale,To shew the heaviest purse,—which must prevail—Where Truth confounded flies, or ne’er is seen,And Falsehood flourishes—an evergreen;—Where foul Corruption keeps his secret cave,And robs the suitor he pretends to save.—Oh! Court, before whose gate, with reddened eyePale Reason stands, and bids each Plaintiff fly;Bids right shake hands with fraud, nor tempt the strife,Begun in sorrow—ending not with life—The legal contest, which may never cease,—A cure perhaps—but worse than the disease—Oh! Court, where dull Procrastination reignsLacking decision—not for want of brains—Which crowds of spectres haunt their doom to knowIn suits commenced two centuries ago—Where all is wrong, and nothing certain, saveA blasted fortune, and an early grave.
Behold yon clown, whose frugal care has madeA pretty something in his humble trade;—Fit object now for pillage of the law!—He sells a field;—the vendee finds a flaw—What mean those writings underneath his arm?Why rise those smirks of gratulation warmFrom hungry black-coats,—eager for the prey,—Who crowd the boro’ on a market day—[1]The game is up—around the blood-hounds close,And snuff their victim with prophetic nose.The case he tells most luminously dark,And puzzles (what will not?) each country shark.An action bring, your right at once to tryCries one;—an action bring the rest reply—All to one object with one feeling tend,—Deceit the means, and robbery the end.But how much will it cost? the rustic cries,A song, a song—the ready fox replies—For fifty pounds your battle will be won,The thing, my friend, is clearer than the sun.You know our office, come with me and look,This very point is in the statute book,Confirmed by fifty judges dead and gone,—Each wiser in his time than Solomon—If still from caution sage you fear to err,Resort at once to some King’s Counsellor;His fee’s two guineas—or about the mark—With two and sixpence more to bribe his clerk,Lest on the shelf your case despised should rot,Or lose its turn, and be at last forgot.
The Gudgeon bites, and lawyer Grabble gainsAnother Client to reward his pains.A case is drawn, ingrossed, and sent to town,And twelve months after comes th’ opinion down.Ill brooks exhausted Patience such a spell,Tho’ loth to quarrel with the name of Bell.What does he promise failure or success?His words are few, and those one can but guess—Like strange Egyptian characters of yore,Or pot-hooks drawn upon an alehouse door,Or like the scrawls a spider’s legs might trace,When dipt in ink, upon as white a space—[2]“He cannot say, but much inclines to doubt“The vendee’s object will be brought about;“And thinks the vendor has an equal chance,“The law so much depends on circumstance—“He knows not half the facts, so would advise“That all disputes should end in compromise—“But, if the vendor wish his luck to try,“He straight must file a bill in Chancery.”[3]
Well have we sped, exulting Grabble shouts,For all is sure, when cautious Johnny doubts—The client nods, uncertain what is meant,And therefore fearful to withhold assent.Forth, with instructions goes the post that eve,And crafty Grabble chuckles in his sleeve—Instructions for a bill, which agents wileBefore the term’s last day may hope to file.How vain that hope!—the dusty papers lieFor eighteen months within the draftsman’s eye.To all complaints he beats the ready chime:—“More weighty matters had beguiled his time—“Injunctions, that would not admit delay,“Answers, demurrers—and the motion day,“All marr’d his wishes to effect dispatch,“Though failing not each leisure hour to snatch.“Vacation comes, and then he will be able“To clear with ease his now o’erloaded table.”[4]Vacation past;—the agent calls again,And finds the draftsman just returned from Spain.The soot-clad parcel lies unopened still,Knaw’d by the rats, that hunger else would kill—At last ’tis done, and then it must be sentTo country down for final settlement.Then queries on the margin rise, like apes,—And here and there a long hiatus gapes.Facts change like mortals in a fairy tale,And from a herring fancy coins a whale.Then crowds of thrice repeated words expressWhat might be done in twenty thousand less;—The whole one precious jargon, fitted wellTo serve for fewel in a lawyer’s hell.
But what says Grabble?—as the folios mount,He must demand some money on account,[5]To pay the counsel and the court their fees,Lest justice’ wheels be clogg’d for want of grease.The client deep into his pocket dives;To part with cash his inmost bowel rives;With deep-drawn sighs he counts each stiver o’er,And deems the law a most infernal bore.What gall’d already? not so quick, my friend,Or rage will turn to madness in the end.Who takes a voyage but expects to beAnnoy’d at first by sickness on the sea?Should weak impatience make him growl and weep,His friends would laugh, and bid him shun the deep.Aye, shun, but how? why look before you leap.When once embark’d, no more can wisdom say;Endure the billows, bluster as they may.
But to proceed. The draft by Grabble’s penRevised, must travel back to town again;Again must be, neglected as before,On draftman’s desk for fifteen months or more;Again must wander o’er the self-same trackFrom town to country, and from country back.At last ’tis settled: then must clerks beginTo cut, prepare, and rule the parchment skin;Then will their zeal demand an overpay,And turn, for expedition, night to day,T’ ingross, examine, file;—another weekAt least ’twill take; subpœnas then bespeak.The seal is shut, and, if you wish them soon,It must be open’d by a special boon—The sum two guineas[6]. Eldon! fie, for shame!Nay, truth’s a libel, spare his lordship’s fame.His wants are many, and his stipend clearScarce mounts to forty thousand pounds a year.’Tis said, that justice to each subject downFlows in a stream untainted from the crown.Then say, can kings for justice gold demand?If not, why claims that right a meaner hand?As well to Peter might a bribe be givenFor keeping (not the seals) but keys of heav’n!
Defendant serv’d, five months must pass, or near,Before the law compels him to appear;For like some barren tree deprived of fruit,In long vacation is a country suit;Or, like a vessel by receding tide,Left helpless on the shore, where it must bideTill tracing back its course the stream once more shall glide.
Term come, then try the process of contempt,If still defendant should delay attempt.Seal an attachment; bear the rogue to goal,And hope your efforts may at last prevail.But ah! what sadness clouds that altered mein?What, if at large the stubborn foe is seen?—His freedom gained, he pays the whole expense—Not so, the practice is a vile pretence.The greater loss from wrong to right rebounds;Ten shillings his, and thine as many pounds.[7]
Appearance entered, but renews the sport;Demand an answer by the clerk in court.He calls, like Glendower for a magic bandOf Ocean sprites, that come not at command.He calls once more in peremptory terms and clear;But none so deaf as those who will not hear.[8]At length an order comes,—if sharp the spur—For six weeks time to answer, plead, demur.Thus to some famish’d dog, that asks a bone,Derision throws with scorn the flinty stone:He seeks but little, and that little soughtWith eagerness, when gain’d, amounts to nought.’Tis all a mockery from first to last;—Wait must the Plaintiff, and the mongrel fast.
Six weeks are gone—once more the game’s alive;Once more for breath must the Defendant strive.Hark! thro’ the purlieus dark of Chancery LaneThe dogs are roused,—the chase begins again,—Again delay pursues its wonted chime,—And claims at last another rule for time.
Why should I pause on points like these to dwell?By such detail my pages idly swell?The process slow and unrepaid the toil—A worthless harvest in a barren soil.The answer filed—three years at least fulfilTheir circling round since Wakefield[9]drew the bill.Then streams of lengthy dull exceptions flowWhich Koe must sign to humour Jemmy Lowe.[10]Amendments next that leave behind no traceOf first complaint;—but make a novel case—Continual reference to the Masters, whoMust have the wit to cut a hair in two;So nicely drawn, so fine the point betweenWhat it should not, or what it should have been.
Here Captain Cross[11]assumes despotic swayEnraged at all who dare his speech gainsay.Once mighty ruler of a tamer crew,Than ever Ballot from the plough-tail drew;Like Falstaff’s scarecrows—ragged, spare, and tall,—Himself the greatest scarecrow of them all.Oh! fortune, thou art but a fickle flirt!For me why sprawl’d not Eldon in the dirt?His carriage oft has passed me thro’ the town,But then alas! fate would not break it down.Oh! fortune, all thy favors are but dross,Or why bestow them on a man like Cross?Thy modes are various, as thy whim is strange;Or why a soldier to a lawyer change—If such great merit must promotion get,’Twere easy sure to add an epaulet.There long he might have shined in native light,At least a bully, if afraid to fight.Oh! Master Cross, resume thy martial post,Or deign in pity to give up the ghost.Thy luckless errors never falling right,Involve the suitors in perpetual night.Thy brain’s dark chaos working like a mole,Directs each action, and pervades the whole;Oh! may it have just sense enough to seeThat all is truth the muse has said of thee!
Here Cox[12], of foundling babes the foster sire,Humane of temper, but too prone to fire,In judgment sits to act by reason’s rule;Yet ever proves of prejudice the tool.A look, a word mistaken, gives offence,And thoughts distorted take the place of sense.Some angry crotchet gets into his brain,Hatched in caprice, and nurtured by disdain.Persuasion fails to shew how warp’d his mind;When anger rules, the soul itself is blind:Confirmed by habit all his faults increase,So let him mend, or else depart in peace.
Lo! waddling forth; in dignity of mein,Corporeal Stratford[13]from his haunt is seen.That bloated form and pompous belly scan;In shape and wit a very alderman!Those vulgar looks his vulgar manners stamp,For knowledge he ne’er burns the midnight lamp.The sternest brute will sometimes kindness own,Bend as you will, and Stratford yet will frown;Enrag’d, he fain would kill you with a look,Ye weak of skull, beware the flying book.Hence to the rocky woods, thou growling bear,Hence to the woods, and deal out justice there.Hence to the woods; but ’ere thou dost escape,Send to supply thy loss a real ape.The suitors scarce will of their lot complain,If by the change some intellect they gain.Like thee, in gestures may his rage be dealt;Like thee, the luckless volumes he may pelt;Each art expressive of the monkey tribe,Well hast thou learnt their natures to imbibe!
Next canting Stephen[14]in his study see,—Himself a slave, devising blacks to free.Better endure the planters iron swayThan pore on musty tomes the livelong day!Better for stolen ease to bear the rack,Than spend a life in one dull gloomy track!No negro thou! what more when all is said?He works by force, and you perhaps for bread.The toil of both may prove a public good,—Another’s profit, or another’s food.But let me pass thy faults, if such they be—And turn to one redeeming quality—Well hast thou done to curb thy thirsty scribeFrom taking what in truth is but a bribe;A bribe, which those, who dole with sparing hand,But little zeal of service can command.Well hast thou done such odious spoil to slake!An equal theft in those who give or take!
Nor yet forgotten is thy sleepy power,Long-winded, doting, vain, capricious Trower[15].Some share of patience to the speaker lend,Or useless every wish to comprehend!Why wilt thou puzzle each half-witted elf,By keeping all the converse to thyself?Why wilt thou rave, till boggling in a mist,Thou raisest points, which but in air exist—Approve to day, to-morrow find a flaw—And own at last that neither is the law.Where are thy tubs, thy dirty smocks and gin?Thy trade is washing, hence and take it in.
But turn my muse; it boots not more to traceThese petty judges of Southampton Place.Such office should some wiser head employThan driveling dotard or unlearned boy—The first a friend to Eldon’s childhood dear,—The last a son of ministerial peer.Alike unskilled they wander in the dark,And stoop at last to counsel with their clerk.Some dirty scribbler in a garret bred,Thence taught by charity to write and read.A wretched dolt, who gains his place by chance,And takes promotion as his years advance;Who now forsooth must act with scorn to those,That pay him meanly, or his will oppose.Thus Pugh and Hone[16], and many more I know—But these the worst,—I spare each meaner foe.
Still are there some this station doom’d to fill,Who shame their masters by superior skill,In Kensit’s[17]talent all a refuge findFrom the dark nothingness of Stratford’s mind;And when at Cross the sense indignant groans,It seeks for solace in thy kindness, Jones.Fortune! from thee one favour let me crave!Debase each tyrant, and exalt each slave!Let those, who now ride topmost on thy wheel,The sad reverse of bitter thraldom feel;Look up to those on whom they now look down,And learn the terror of a despot’s frown.
Erroneous judgment breeds a like report,And both will bear revision by the court;Then must the cause experience more delay,Last in the list that lengthens every day.What if his Honor, after two long years,Decide the question that he never hears!Before the Vice or Rolls, it matters notHow heard or judged; alike the suitors lot.From either sentence you may take appeals,If faulty deemed, to him who holds the seals;Then will some paltry point, of little worthTo him who doubts, or him who gave it birth,Enchain the suit for ages, like a spell,From which Impatience will in vain rebel;Alas! my lord, yon starving paupers see!How can they live upon a bare term fee?Let still the client all his pangs endure,But for thy brother tribe provide a cure.Be Lord High Chancellor, if so you must,But oh! resign some portion of thy trust—Its various duties more attention claimThan one weak head can muster for the same.
Young Peer[18], be wise, and if you court success,Outdo your senior[19]by attempting less.His failure served great talents to produce;But what is intellect if not of use?Well could he coin a doubt, or problem make—But slow to solve, and there was his mistake.His brains were sound; but little good they did.Like some rich jewel in dark cavern hid.Quick was his mind each error to perceive;—Much craft had those who could that mind deceive—A moment’s thought would often shew a flaw,Which those who look’d much deeper never saw.Well was he skill’d to crack a wretched jest,And all who laughed were sure to be caress’d.He bore no rival in his high career,As Leach[20]can tell, at whom he lov’d to sneer;—To Flattery he yielded blind assent;On those who blam’d him hate itself was spent;This Brougham[21]has felt,—tho’ all his merit own,Deprived by malice of a silken gown.And yet his visage, like a crocodileIntending mischief, still could wear the smile.Oft times a tear-drop down his cheek would flow,While aged victims told their tale of woe—Told of their hopes delay’d and run to waste,With wealth before them, which they could not taste—Told of their starving babes and buried wife,—Themselves just tottering on the brink of life.Then would he clasp his hands with false intent,And call on heaven to witness what he meant,With promise send the discontent away,—Their judgment certain on a future day.It comes—again he feigns the ready tear,—As God’s his judge, the papers are not here—Where can they be?—his careful wife[22]perhapsHas torn the dusty lumber into scraps.Mishap unfortunate! the suitor cries,His Lordship nods assent, and wipes his eyesWith ’kerchief clean, in which a potent leakDraws from each orb the stream that wets his cheek.“Alas! my lord, when will the judgment come?—“Send me the papers, and I’ll take them home.”The papers got, be sure to hand them in,Tho’ Hand[23]to take them deem it half a sin,And swears the mass now in his Lordship’s houseHas left no cranny for the smallest mouse.This all results from pre-concerted plan;The master trifles, why should not his man;Excuse, the judgment day by day protracts,His mind still wavering, or forgot the facts;And yet he seems not unabashed by shame,Thus forced in self-defence the lie to frame.As carelessly around his glance he throws,Each eye takes shelter underneath his brows,Then with apparent calmness in the face,He strives to meet you, but ’tis all grimace;Look as he will, the thinking mind can seeHe half detests his own duplicity;Shrinks from the gaze of those who weep around,And in his bosom feels a deeper wound.Oft have I marked him in an inward trance,And watched the changes of his countenance;Thus have I seen, or fancied to have seen,Remorse and terror painted on his mein:Remorse for mischief done at best in sloth,And terror; but how short the reign of both,More lively feelings soon his grief restrain,And heartless Eldon is himself again.
Albeit, when thieves in penitence beginTo weep their guilty deeds, and fly from sin,The world oft profits by their former vice,Should chance enroll them in the state police;They follow crime as some old fox might do,Who hunted once, another should pursue,Woe to the wretch, that struggles to evadeThe wary cunning of such renegade;In vain each wile, each mazy turn he tries,For justice triumphs, and the culprit dies.So hopes the world that Eldon, now resigned,Will own the faults to which his eyes were blind;Chase out corruption from his dark abode,And cleanse each path where fraud the usurper strode;Thus may he by that dying act effaceThe burning stigma of a life’s disgrace.
Shrink not, my lord, whate’er the muse appears,She wars but feebly with declining years;Compassion fetters what she fain would sing,And robs severity of half its sting:Those hoary locks command respect from youth,But cannot wholly close the lips of truth.
Suppose the judgment given[24]; but after yearsOf endless labour, and a million tears:Suppose the minutes by his lordship’s scrawlDrawn out and settled, after many a brawl;Wherein loquacious Agar[25]bears the bell—An empty clapper in a brazen shell.Hark! how the frothy nonsense from his lipsInvolves the audience in one black eclipse,From which in vain they struggle to be free.When darkness triumphs, who can hope to see?Gods! what a tongue, and what a lack of wits!How well the former with the latter sits!In him the worst of causes finds a friend;He tears to tatters what he cannot mend.But still his eloquence is most sublime,In points of practice and in tricks for time;In petty motions for some end absurd,To please his Frowd, or gratify his Hurd.When broken down, he next resorts to lies,Disputes another’s word, his own denies,Insists that all the law is on his sideAnd Truth proclaims a perjured Suicide!When on his legs, ’tis hard to get him down,Tho’ counsel cough, and oft his Lordship frown.He bungles on; while dulness weaves a wreatheTo crown his head when fairly out of breath,—A wreath of poppies mingled with night-bane,That once asleep, he ne’er may wake again.Blest consummation! may it happen soon,Or those, who hear, will first essay, the boon.
Agar farewell, but ere I cease to greetLet me conduct thee to thy country seat.Abode of taste, where all the graces shine,—The prospect charming, and the site divine!The road that leads from Battle Bridge pursueTo Kentish Town, and keep a dexter view;There mark the walls of many coloured-brick,With here and there a withered poplar stick.A dirty gate straight walks of gravel shews,The new canal around in silence flows;Its fetid waters, stinking as they pass,Contend in sweetness with the scent of gas.Here Pancras rears it’s charitable dome,There limekilns smoke, and cloud the air in gloom;Wheree’r you wander, or the sight divert,One scene prevails of darkness, stench, and dirt.Well in one picture might the muse recordHow fine the mansion, and how wise it’s lord.Ye passengers! who from the road admire,Let no wild transports tempt you to go nigher;The rights of soil he zealously protectsBy transportation, as the law directs!
Not mine the purpose step by step to shewWhat makes the progress of a cause more slow:Nor yet to trace the current of expenseThrough all its mazes, but the whole condense.The same complaints through all the system fly;—Thus what I censure will to all apply.
Omit each intermediate step, and seeThe cause at last from all incumbrance free,And brought to issue;—then let Spence[26]prepareInterrogations for your friends to swear.Propose each question so distinctly nice,That all may keep within it, like a vice;For should some idle word escape, who knowsBut it might prove more fatal than from foes?Avoid the hostile camp, and, if you can,Before he speaks, examine well your man;Teach him the lesson he has got to learn,And let him thoroughly his cue discern;Hold out large promise, if he meet your will,And ere he comes to swear his belly fill.If still reluctant, coax him with a bribe,Persuading all—but most the Jewish tribe.
To strike commissioners is next the thing,Four names a piece let either party bring;Then from the four let each their two erase;Seal quick the dedimus, and name a place;Bespeak provision for a month at least,And call your brother tigers to the feast;So may they well that courtesy repayBy like invite upon a future day!Of wine be careful to secure a stock—Port, Champagne, Claret, Burgundy, and Hock.Your guns arrange, call out your steeds and dogs,For too much toil the mental action clogs.[27]What—if to keep your trust an oath be given;Secure of hell, no longer think of heaven;Enjoy the goods that knavery has sent,And laugh and revel to your heart’s content.One day with opening the commission fill;The next, with prefatory measures kill;The third, discuss what will not question bear;The fourth, for relaxation course a hare.But why thus hunt a subject off it’s legs?I do but teach my grandam to suck eggs:—An art attornies practice far too well,—Yoke white, their own—a client takes the shell.What if he grumble, theirs has been the toil,With profit scarce to make the kettle boil.A porter’s lot would suit them better far;No anxious cares his peaceful dream can mar;While their reward for nightly want of ease,Just adds a pint of ale to bread and cheese.