A GENTLEMAN, to give us somewhat new, Hath brought up Oxford with him to show you--- Pray, be not frighted, though the scene and gown's The University's, the wit's the Town's; The lines each honest Englishman may speak, Yet not mistake his mother-tongue for Greek, For still 'twas part of his vow'd liturgy: @3From learned comedies deliver me!@1 Wishing all those that lov'd 'em here asleep, Promising Scholars, but no scholarship. You'd smile to see how he does vex and shake, Speaks naught; but if the Prologue does but take, Or the first act were past the pikes once, then--- Then hopes and joys, then frowns and fears agen, Then blushes like a virgin now to be Robb'd of his comical virginity In presence of you all---in short, you'd say More hopes of mirth are in his looks than play. These fears are for the noble and the wise; But if 'mongst you there are such foul dead eyes As can damn unarraign'd, call law their pow'rs, Judging it sin enough that it is ours, And with the house shift their decreed desires, Fair still to th' black, Black-still to the White-friars, He does protest he will sit down and weep Castles and pyramids--- ---No, he will on, Proud to be rais'd by such destruction So far from quarr'lling with himself and wit, That he will thank them for the benefit, Since, finding nothing worthy of their hate, They reach him that themselves must envy at. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THYESTES, ACT 2: CHORUS by LUCIUS ANNAEUS SENECA OH, LOVE THOU TOO! by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS THE GRAVE OF COLUMBUS by JOANNA BAILLIE A WAY TO A HAPPY NEW YEAR by ROBERT BREWSTER BEATTIE PSALM 1. THE RIGHTEOUS AND THE WICKED CONTRASTED by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE KENTUCKY POEMS: EPILOGUE by MADISON JULIUS CAWEIN SONG AND CRY OF A SOLDIER IN THE LINES by ALBERT EDWARD CLEMENTS |