The Methodist

Category: Poetry
Nothing, search all creation round,
Nothing so firmly good is found,
Whose substance, with such closeness knit,
Corruption's Touch will not admit;
But, spite of all incroaching stains,
Its native purity retains:
Whose texture will nor warp, nor fade,
Though moths and weather shou'd invade,
Which Time's sharp tooth cannot corrode,
Proof against Accident and Mode;
And, maugre each assailing dart,
Thrown by the hand of Force, or Art,
Remains (let Fate do what it will)
Simple and uncorrupted still.

Virtue, of constitution nice,
Quickly degen'rates into Vice;
Change but the Person, Place, and Time,
And what was Merit turns to Crime.
Wisdom, which men with so much pain,
With so much weariness attain,
May in a little moment quit,
And abdicate the throne of Wit,
And leave, a vacant seat, the brain,
For Folly to usurp and reign.
Should you but discompose the tide,
On which Ideas wont to ride,
Ferment it with a yeasty Storm,
Or with high Floods of Wine deform;
Altho' Sir Oracle is he,
Who is as wise, as wise can be,
In one short minute we shall find
The wise man gone, a fool behind.
Courage, that is all nerve and heart,
That dares confront Death's brandish'd dart,
That dares to single Fight defy
The stoutest Hector of the sky,
Whose mettle ne'er was known to slack,
Nor wou'd on thunder turn his back;
How small a matter may controul,
And sooth the fury of his soul!
Shou'd this intrepid Mars, his clay
Dilute with nerve-relaxing Tea,
Thin broths, thin whey, or water-gruel,
He is no longer fierce and cruel,
But mild and gentle as a dove,
The Hero's melted down to Love.
The juices soften'd, (here we note
More on the juices than the Coat
Depends, to make a valiant Mars
Rich in the heraldry of scars)
The Man is soften'd too, and shews
No fondness for a bloody nose.
When Georgy S--k----le shunn'd the Fray,
He'd swill'd a little too much Tea.
Chastity melts like sun-kiss'd snow,
When Lust's hot wind begins to blow.
Let but that horrid Creature, Man,
Breathe on a lady thro' her fan,
Her Virtue thaws, and by and bye
Will of the falling Sickness die.
Lo! Beauty, still more transitory,
Fades in the mid-day of its glory!
For Nature in her kindness swore,
That she who kills, shall kill no more;
And in pure mercy does erase
Each killing feature in the face;
Plucks from the cheek the damask rose,
E'en at the moment that it blows;
Dims the bright lustre of those eyes
To which the Gods wou'd sacrifice;
Dries the moist lip, and pales its hue,
And brushes off its honied dew;
Flattens the proudly swelling chest,
Furrows the round elastic breast,
And all the Loves that on it play'd,
Are in a tomb of wrinkles laid;
Recalls those charms, which she design'd
To please, and not bewitch Mankind;
But with too delicate a touch,
Heightening the Ornaments too much,
She finds her daughters can convert
Blessings to curses, good to hurt,
Proof of parental love to give,
She blots them out that Man may live.

The hour will come (which let not me
Indulgent Nature, live to see!)
The hour will come, when Chloe's form
Shall with its beauty feed the worm;
That face where troops of Cupids throng,
Whose charms first warm'd me into song,
Shall wrinkle, wither, and decay,
To Age, and to Disease, a prey!
Chloe, in whom are so combin'd
The charms of body and of mind,
As might to Earth elicit Jove,
Thinking his Heav'n well left for Love;
Perfection as she is, the hour
Will come, when she must feel the pow'r
Of Time, and to his wither'd arms,
Resign the rifling of her charms!
Must veil her beauties in a cloud,
A grave her bed, her robe a shroud!
When all her glowing, vivid bloom,
Must fade and wither in the tomb!
When she who bears the ensigns now,
Of Beauty's Priestess on her brow,
Shall to th' abhorr'd embrace of Death
Give up the sweetness of her breath!
When worms--but stop, Description, there--
My heart cannot the picture bear--
Sickens to think there is a day,
When Chloe will be made a prey
To Death, a piece-meal feast for him
With rav'nous jaw to tear each limb,
And feature after feature eat,
While Beauty only serves for Meat--
Wretched to know that this is true,
Forbear t' anticipate the view!
Hence, Observation!--take your leave!--
And kindly, Memory, deceive!
And when some forty years are fled,
And age has on her beauties fed,
Dear Self-Delusion! lend thy skill
To fancy she is Chloe still!

Cities and Empires will decay,
And to Corruption fall a prey!
Athens, of arts the native land,
Cou'd not the stroke of Time withstand;
There Serpents hiss, and ravens croak,
Where Socrates and Plato spoke.

Proud Troy herself (as all things must)
Is crumbled into native dust;
Is now a pasture, where the beast
Strays for his vegetable feast,
Old Priam's royal palace now
May couch the ox, the ass, the cow.--

Rome, city of imperial worth,
The mighty mistress of the earth;
Rome, that gave law to all the world,
Is now to blank Destruction hurl'd!--
Is now a sepulchre, a tomb,
To tell the stranger, "Here was Rome."--

View the West Abbey! there we see
How frail a thing is royalty!
Where crowns and sceptres worms supply,
And kings and queens, like lumber lie.
The Tombs themselves are worn away,
And own the empire of Decay,
Mouldering like the royal dust,
Which to preserve they have in trust.
Nor has the Marble more withstood
The rage of Time, than Flesh and Blood!
The King of Stone is worn away,
As well as is the King of Clay--
Here lies a King without a Nose,
And there a Prince without his Toes;
Here on her back a Royal Fair
Lies, but a little worse for wear;
Those lips, whose touch cou'd almost turn
Old age to youth, and make it burn;
To which young kings were proud to kneel,
Are kick'd by every Schoolboy's heel;
Struck rudely by the Showman's Wand,
And crush'd by every callous Hand:
Here a puissant Monarch frowns
In menace high to rival Crowns;
He threatens--but will do no harm--
Our Monarch has not left an arm.
Thus all Things feel the gen'ral curse,
That all Things must with Time grow worse.

But your Philosophers will say,
Best Things grow worst when they decay.
And many facts they have at hand
To prove it, shou'd you proofs demand.
As if Corruption shut her jaw,
And scorn'd to cram her filthy maw,
With aught but dainties rich and rare,
And morsels of the choicest fare;
As garden Birds are led to bite,
Where'er the fairest fruits invite.
If Phoebus' rays too fiercely burn,
The richest Wines to sourest turn:
And they who living highly fed,
Will breed a Pestilence when dead.
Thus Aldermen, who at each Feast,
Cram Tons of Spices from the East,
Whose leading wish, and only plan,
Is to learn how to pickle Man;
Who more than vie with 'gypt's art,
And make themselves a human Tart,
A walking Pastry-Shop, a Gut,
Shambles by Wholesale to inglut;
And gorge each high-concocted Mess
The art of Cookery can dress:
Yet spite of all, when Death thinks fit
To take them off, lest t' other bit
Shou'd burst these living Mummies, able
Neither to eat, nor quit the Table;
Whether He Dropsy sends or Gout,
To fetch them by the Shoulders out;
Tho' living they were Salt and Spice,
The carcase is not over nice;
And all may find, who have a Nose,
Dead Aldermen are not a rose.

This reas'ning only serves to shew,
The world call'd Natural, is so.
But various instances proclaim,
'Tis in the moral World the same.
Thus Woman, Nature's chastest work,
Lust-struck, out-paramours the Turk;
Tho' gentle as the suckling Child,
Enrag'd, than famish'd Wolves more wild;
A more fell minister of Death--
Rime gives the instance in Mackbeth.

Reason herself, that sober Dame,
So mild, so temperate, so tame,
Her head once turn'd, and giddy grown,
Raving with phrenzy not her own,
Plays madder pranks, more full of spleen
Than any Hoyden of sixteen.
Whether she burns with Love or Hate,
Or grows with baseless Hopes elate,
With Desperation is forlorn,
Or with imagin'd horrors torn,
If on Ambition's swelling tide,
Her crazy bark from side to side,
Reels like a drunkard, tempest-tost,
Or in the Gulph of Pride is lost;
Whate'er the leading Passion be,
That works the Soul's anxiety,
In each Extreme th' effect is bad,
Sense grows diseas'd, and Reason mad.

Why shou'd the Muse of Angels tell
Turn'd into Devils when they fell?
Why search the Chronicles of Hell,
While Earth examples it as well?
Why talk of Satan, while we see
Each day some new Apostacy?
Tories to Whigs convert, and Whigs,
Mere Ministerial Whirlegigs,
Turn'd by the hand of Int'rest, take
The Tory-part, for Lucre's sake.
Patriots turn Placemen, and support
Against their Country's good the Court;
Are bought with Pensions to retire,
When drooping Kingdoms most require
Their aid----Tho' here the Muse wou'd fain
Except ONE of the pension'd Train,
(One meritorious 'bove the rest,
A patriot Minister, confest)
Yet strictest honour can't acquit
That Pensioner, who once was P----.
Instance on instance to my view
Come rushing, of the changeling crew,
That I could quarrel with my Nature,
To think that Man is such a Creature--
And are we all a fickle tribe,
Venal to ev'ry golden bribe?
Is there not one of honour found,
In all the List of Placemen found?
Yes--one there is, in perils tried,
Yet never known to change his Side,
Or Principles--nor think it strange,
He ne'er had Principles to change,
And for a Side (the proof is new)
He's none, because that he has two.
Throw him from Party's giddy heights,
A Cat in Politics he lights
Ever upon his feet; his heart
Clings both to Whig and Tory-part;
Is this, is that, is both, or neither,
And still keeps shifting with the Weather.
Who does not know that T--s--d's he,
That reads the Book of Ministry?

Thus let us turn where'er we will,
Each Machiavel's a Changeling still.
But tho' among all Nature's works
The seed of foul Corruption lurks,
Yet no where is it known to bear
So vile a Crop on Ground so fair,
As when upon Religion's root
It raises Diabolic Fruit.

When the Almighty Father's Love
Call'd Things to Being, from above
Millions of winged Blessings flew,
Sent from his right hand, to bedew
The new-born Earth, and from their wings
Shed good on all created Things.
Precious and various tho' the store
Which down to Earth these Legates bore,
That Heav'nly Spark we Reason call,
Was far the richest boon of all.

By this we find th' Almighty Cause
From whom the World its Being draws;
By whom Earth's plenteous Table's spread,
At which each living Creature's fed;
Who gave the Breath of Life, and whence
This fine Variety of Sense;
Whose Hands unfold the azure sky,
Sublimely pleasing to the Eye;
Who tun'd the feather'd Songster's throat,
Giving such softness to his note,
To fill the Ear with dulcet sound,
And pour sweet Music all around;
Who on the teeming Branches plac'd
Such various Fruit to please the Taste;
What bounteous Hand perfum'd the Rose,
And ev'ry scented Flow'r that blows,
And wafts its fragrance thro' the Vale,
Courting the Smell in ev'ry gale,
To whom it is we owe so much
Substantial pleasure in the Touch;
And whence, superior to the whole,
Those raptures that transport the Soul;
This gives our Gratitude to glow
To him, from whom such Blessings flow;
This teaches Man his moral Part,
And grafts Religion in the Heart.

Glory to God, good Will to Man,
And Peace on Earth, compos'd the plan,
For which Religion first came down,
And brought to Earth a heav'nly Crown.
Better her Purpose to complete,
And Satan's Malice to defeat,
A Troop of holy Genii came,
Co-workers in the glorious Scheme.
To each a scroll the Goddess gave,
On which these lines She did engrave:
"Go, teach the sons of Men to raise
Their voice unto their Maker's praise.
Go, call forth Charity to meet
Distress that seeks her in the Street;
Bid her the lame with Legs supply,
And be unto the blind an Eye;
A Mantle o'er the naked throw,
And reach a healing hand to Woe;
Visit the bed where Sickness lies,
And wipe the tears from Orphans eyes;
Bid her Affliction's hour beguile,
And teach the tear-worn Cheek to smile;
Bid her send Comfort to expell
Grief from the lonely Widow's Cell;
Make blunt the arrows of Mischance,
And ope the eyes of Ignorance;
To those lost Pilgrims point the Way,
Who in Sin's tenfold Darkness stray,
Recall them from Hell's thickest night,
And shew Salvation's glorious Light;
For thus the World that Peace shall find,
For which it was by God design'd."--

Such the commands Religion gave,
When first she came the World to save,
Such the attendants in her Train,
When She began her holy Reign.
And when Messiah's gracious Love
Urg'd him to leave the Realms above,
Urg'd him to quit his heav'nly Throne,
His People's Trespass to atone,
And, tho' so long they had withstood
His Will, to wash them with his Blood;
The great Command he did renew,
To give to God, and Man his due;
Bade the bright Sun of Faith arise,
And open'd Heav'n to mortal eyes,
Leaving Religion on the Earth,
More fair and pure than at her Birth.--

How mutilated now and marr'd,
Deform'd, distorted, mangled, scarr'd!
Thro' modern Conventicles trace
The Goddess, you'll not know her face:
The holy Genii all are fled,
And Sprites and Dev'ls come in their stead.
And now a counterfeiting Dame
Usurps Religion's sacred Name,
But no more like in Heart or Face,
Than F--x's deeds to deeds of Grace.
Visit her at her T-tt--m Seat,
You'll find she is an errant Cheat.
For Satan, Man's invet'rate foe,
Whose greatest joy is human woe,
Repining at the heav'nly Plan,
That promis'd so much Good to Man,
Us'd all his Malice, Wit, and Pow'r,
The World's great Blessings to devour.
Well the malicious Spirit knew
Whence Man his chief resources drew
Of Happiness, and saw confest,
Where all was good, Religion best;
And at her unpolluted Heart
He aim'd his most envenom'd Dart.
He knew the Interest of Hell
Cou'd never on the Earth go well,
While pure Religion did maintain
O'er Man a sanctimonious reign.
With her he wag'd malicious War,
He might, if not destroy her, mar
Her Face; might with false Lights misguide,
And make her Combat on his side.
Highly did his Ambition burn
Heav'n's Arms against itself to turn.
Nor would his Malice triumph less,
To damn where God design'd to bless.

For this the Fiend to Earth ascends,
To try his Int'rest with his Friends.
Long in his fiery Chariot hurl'd,
He had explor'd the pendent World;
Long had he search'd without avail,
Each Meeting, Dungeon, Court, and Jail,
Each Mart of Villainy, where Vice
Presides, and Virtue bears no Price,
Where Fraud, Hypocrisy, and Lies
Are selling while the Devil buys.
Long had he search'd, but could not find
An Agent suited to his Mind,
Who cou'd transact his Business well,
And do on Earth the work of Hell;
That he might at his leisure go,
And manage his Affairs below.--

Tir'd and despairing of a Friend
On whom he safely might depend,
At T-tt--m he alights from Air--
Magus, that Sorcerer, was there.
Pleas'd Satan somewhat nearer drew,
Look'd thro' him at a single view,
Bless'd his good Luck, and grinn'd aghast--
"'Tis well, for I have found at last,
The Thing I long have sought, in Thee,
An Agent in Iniquity.
Thus let me mark Thee for my own,
And from henceforth for mine be known."

Then with out-stretched claws his Eyes
He twisted diff'rent ways--the Skies
Are watch'd by one, and (strange to tell!)
The other is the Guard of Hell.
Then thus--"'Tis fit thy Eyes shou'd roll,
Cross as the purpose of thy Soul,
Fit that they look a diff'rent way,
Like what You do, and what You say;
Thy Eye-balls now are pois'd and hung,
As even as thy Heart and Tongue--
Prosper--to me, to Hell (he cried)
Be true, but false to all beside.
Riches are mine--I will repay
For ev'ry Soul you lead astray--
Give out thyself a Light to shew
Which way 'tis best to Heav'n to go;
But lead the Pilgrims wrong, and shine
An Ignis fatuus of mine--
Draw them thro' bog, thro' brake, thro' mire,
I'll dry them at a rousing Fire."

Magus complacent smil'd--his Eyes
Twinkled with signs of Joy, one flies
Upward, and t'other down, like Scales,
Where this ascends, when that prevails--
Then thrice he turn'd upon his heel,
And swore Allegiance to the De'el--

Right faithfully his Oath he kept,
And might each Night before he slept
Boast of his labours to maintain,
And spread abroad his Master's Reign;
Might boast the magic of his Rod
To whip away the Love of God,
For all of God he makes appear
Has nought to love, but all to fear.
That debt, which Gratitude each day
Paying, wou'd still own much to pay;
Instead of Duty freely paid,
A Tyrant's hard Exaction's made.
Fitted the simple to cajole,
First of his Wits, and then his Soul,
He urges fifty false Pretences,
Preaching his Hearers from their Senses.
He knows his Master's Realm so well,
His Sermons are a Map of Hell,
An Ollio made of Conflagration,
Of Gulphs of Brimstone, and Damnation,
Eternal Torments, Furnace, Worm,
Hell-Fire, a Whirlwind, and a Storm,
With Mammon, Satan, and Perdition,
And Beelzebub to help the Dish on;
Belial and Lucifer, and all
The nick-Names which old Nick we call--
But he has ta'en especial care,
To have nor Sense nor Reason there.
A thousand scorching Words beside,
Over his tongue as glibly slide,
Familiar as a glass of wine,
Or a Tobacco-pipe on mine;
That You wou'd swear he was compleater,
Than Powell, as a Fire-Eater.

Virgins he will seduce astray,
Only to shew the shortest Way
To Heaven, and because it lies
Above the Zodiac in the Skies,
That they may better see the Track,
He lays them down upon their Back.
Domestic Peace he can destroy,
And the confusion view with Joy,
Children from Parents he can draw,
What's Conscience?--he is safe from Law--
The closest Union can divide,
Take Husbands from their Spouses' side,
But it turns out to better Use,
Wives from their Husbands to seduce;
And as their Journey lies up-Hill,
Ev'ry Incumbrance were an Ill;
And lest their Speed shou'd be withstood,
He takes their Money--for their Good.

Such is the Agent Satan chose,
Religion's Progress to oppose--
Too great the Task for one was thought,
And under-Agents must be sought--
On this high Enterprize intent,
A troop of evil Sprites he sent,
Commission'd, wheresoe'er they found
Hearts hollow, rotten, and unsound,
Within those Breasts accurs'd to dwell,
Teaching the Liturgy of Hell.
Big with the Charge th' infernal Crew
To their belov'd Appointment flew;
With busy search thro' ev'ry Class,
Thro' ev'ry Rank of Men they pass,
In ev'ry Class of Men they find
Some Hearts corrupted to their Mind,
Ev'ry Profession they explore,
Ev'ry Profession gives them more;
The higher Functions ransack'd, now
Each vulgar Trade, each sweaty Brow
Is search'd, and in them all were found,
Some hollow, rotten, and unsound.
In each depraved Bosom dwell
These Sprites, nor miss their native Hell.
Hence ev'ry Blockhead, Knave, and Dunce,
Start into Preachers all at once.
Hence Ignorance of ev'ry size,
Of ev'ry shape Wit can devise,
Altho' so dull it hardly knows,
Which are its Fingers, which its Toes,
Which is the left Hand, which the Right,
When it is Day, or when 'tis Night,
Shall yet pretend to keep the Key
Of God's dark Secrets, and display
His hidden Mysteries, as free
As if God's privy Council He,
Shall to his Presence rush, and dare
To raise a pious Riot there.

Lawyers (a Commutation strange!)
Coke Littleton for Bible change;
Quit their beloved wrangling Hall,
More loudly in a Church to bawl:
Statutes at large are thrown aside,
And now the Testament's their guide;
And full as fervent, on their Knees,
For Heav'n they pray, as once for Fees;
Plaintiff, Defendant, and my Lord,
Are banish'd, and now Faith's the Word,
Of Briefs no longer now they dream,
Religion is the only Theme.
The Physic-Tribe their Art resign,
And lose the Quack in the Divine;
Galen lies on the Shelf unread,
A Pray'r-Book open in its stead;
Salvation now is all the Cant,
Salvation is the only Want.
"Throw Physic to the Dogs," they cry,
'Twill never bring you to the Sky.
Of a New-birth they prate, and prate
While Midwifry is out of Date;
Let Fevers, Agues, take their turn,
To freeze the Patient, or to burn,
In vain he seeks the Physic Tribe,
No Recipe will they prescribe,
But what is sovereign to controul
The Maladies that hurt the Soul.
And tho' while Body-quacks, with Pill
Or Bolus, 'twas their Trade to kill,
More miserably still, alack!
For the diseased Soul they quack.

The Sons of War sometimes are known
To fight with Weapons not their own,
Ceasing the Sword of Steel to wield,
They take Religion's Sword and Shield.

Ev'ry Mechanic will commence
Orator, without Mood or Tense.
Pudding is Pudding still, they know,
Whether it has a Plumb or no;
So, tho' the Preacher has no skill,
A Sermon is a Sermon still.

The Bricklay'r throws his Trowel by,
And now builds Mansions in the Sky;
The Cobbler, touch'd with holy Pride,
Flings his old Shoes, and Last aside,
And now devoutly sets about
Cobbling of Souls that ne'er wear out;
The Baker, now a Preacher grown,
Finds Man lives not by Bread alone,
And now his Customers he feeds
With Pray'rs, with Sermons, Groans and Creeds;
The Tinman, mov'd by Warmth within,
Hammers the Gospel, just like Tin;
Weavers inspir'd their Shuttles leave,
Sermons, and flimsy Hymns to weave;
Barbers unreap'd will leave the Chin,
To trim, and shave the Man within;
The Waterman forgets his Wherry,
And opens a celestial Ferry;
The Brewer, bit by Phrenzy's Grub,
The Mashing for the Preaching Tub
Resigns, those Waters to explore,
Which if You drink, you thirst no more;
The Gard'ner, weary of his Trade,
Tir'd of the Mattock, and the Spade,
Chang'd to Apollos in a Trice,
Waters the Plants of Paradise;
The Fishermen no longer set
For Fish the Meshes of their Net,
But catch, like Peter, Men of Sin,
For catching is to take them in.

Well had the wand'ring Spirits sped,
And thro' the World their Poison spread,
Made Lodgments in each tainted Breast;
And each infected Heart possess'd.

The wayward Bus'ness being done,
Satan to make his Choice begun
Of under-Ministers, to do
What One cou'd not be equal to.

A second Agent, like the first,
Who on D'moniac Milk was nurst,
Had Moorfields trusted to his Care,
For Satan keeps an Office there.
Lean is the Saint, and lank, to shew
That Flesh and Blood to Heav'n can't go;
His Hair like Candles hangs, a sign
How bright his inward Candles shine.

Of Satan's Agents these the Chief,
A thousand others lend Relief,
And take some labour off their Hands,
Each as th' internal Sprite commands:
But working with a diff'rent Spell,
They lead by various Ways to Hell.

Sickens the Soul? and is its state
With Sin's Disease grown desperate?
To divers Quacks you may apply,
And special Nostrums of them buy.
Tottenham's the best accustom'd Place,
There Magus squints Men into Grace.
W-s--y sells Powders, Draughts, and Pills,
Sov'reign against all sorts of Ills,
Assurance charms away the Fit,
Or at least makes it intermit--
M-d--n the springs of Health unlocks,
And by his Preaching cures the P----
R-m--ne works greater Wonders still,
Pulls you by Gravity up-Hill,
And for whate'er you do amiss,
Rewards you with celestial Bliss;
By your bad Deeds your Faith you shew,
'Tis but believe, and up You go.
B--rr--s and W-r--r set up Shop,
To sell Religion's Pill and Drop,
They teach their Patients how to fly
On Voice and Action to the Sky.
One of the Magi of the East,
A little perking, puppet-Priest,
Has got the Harlequino-way,
His Patients Heav'nward to convey;
And their Salvation to advance,
A Jig will at the Altar dance.

Such were the Plenipo's in Town,
Who serv'd the Diabolic Crown.
Not far remov'd, a female Friend
Gave Proofs, that Satan might depend
On her best Service, and support,
For what serv'd him, to her was Sport.
H----, cloy'd with carnal Bliss,
Longing to taste how Spirits kiss,
Bids Chapels for her Saints arise,
Which are but Bagnios in Disguise;
Where She may suck her T----'s Breath,
Expiring in seraphic Death.

That Satan better might succeed,
Of other Agents he had need,
His Country-Int'rest to support,
While Dodd was preaching to the Court.
The Town was left, and now his Flight
Bore to the North the horrid Sprite;
Now had he travers'd many a League,
And felt, as Spirits feel, Fatigue,
When, in a dark, romantic Wood,
In which an antique Mansion stood,
He spied, close to a Hovel-door,
A Saint conversing with his Whore.
Double he seem'd, and worn with Age,
Little adapted to engage
In Love's hot War, too dry his Trunk
To cope with a lascivious Punk;
So humble too he seem'd, You'd swear,
Humility herself was there;
So like a Sawyer too he bows,
You'd think that he was Meekness' Spouse;
But Satan read his Visage-lines,
And found some favourable Signs,
That this meek Saint might, in the Dark,
Make his Infernalship a Clerk;
Tho' muffled in Religion's Cloak
So close, that it might almost choak
A Pharisee, it might be still
Only a Cloak to doff at Will;
His Speech might be an acted Part,
A Language foreign to his Heart.
He knew, that tho' upon his Tongue,
Religion, a mere Cant-word, hung,
He might forget it in his Work,
And be at Heart a very Turk.

Finesse and Trick wou'd ne'er succeed,
If Men wou'd only learn to read,
To read the Lines of Nature's Pen,
Drawn in the Countenance of Men,
Where Truth speaks out distinct and clear,
If we had but the Trick to hear.

So far'd it with our Saint, while He
Wou'd seem downright Humility,
Some honest Features cry'd aloud,
"Our Master is of Spirit proud."
Pass him with Bonnet on, his Lip
Will hang as low as to his Hip;
His bloated Eye its Venom darts,
And from its gloomy Socket starts;
And if the Body's frame we scan,
He cannot be an upright Man.
And there are Proofs, from which we see
His Body and his Soul agree.
Altho' he is as fond of Pray'rs,
As Country Girls of Country Fairs;
Yet shou'd he in the Church-yard spy
Some tempting Wanton passing by,
E'en at the Moment that his Knee
Is bent in Sign of Piety,
Quick his Devotion leaves the Heart,
And settles in some other Part;
The Book of Pray'r is shut, and Heav'n
For the dear Charms of Coelia giv'n.

Th' Arch-Fiend this saintly Sinner spied,
And with malicious Pleasure ey'd,
Well pleas'd to think that he had found
Such a Hell-Factor above Ground;
And thus began th' infernal Sprite--
"Libidinoso! if I'm right!
Art thou that Son of mine on Earth,
Whose deeds so loud proclaim thy Birth?
Of whom so many Strumpets tell
Such Tales as get Thee Fame in Hell?
But Children know not whence they spring,
Whether by Beggar got, or King;
Yet I by certain Marks can know,
Whether Thou art my Child, or no.
Uncase--and let me see your Waist--
For there are private Tokens plac'd,
By which my own I know--if there
No secret Lines of mine appear,
I claim Thee not--but if I see
The two Initials F and P,
Then art Thou mine--nay, never start--
And Heav'n can claim in Thee no Part"--

And now his sapless Trunk he stripp'd,
Like Culprits sentenc'd to be whipp'd,
When lo! th' Initials rose to View,
And prov'd the Fiend's Conjecture true.
And all his Waist (detested Brand!)
Was scribbled with the Dev'l's short Hand;
Was mark'd with Whoredom, Lust, and Letchery,
Malice, Hypocrisy, and Treachery,
With Envy, Lying, and Betraying,
With Fasting, Wenching, Fiddling, Praying,
And all the Catalogue of Sin
Deeply engraven in his Skin--
Pleas'd the grim Pow'r survey'd, and smil'd,
Embrac'd and said--"My darling Child,
Blest was the Hour, and blest the Spot,
Where Thou, my 'Bidin, wert begot.
Know then, you're not what You profess,
Her Son, whose Lands you do possess;
No--Thou'rt my wayward Son, a Witch
Litter'd thee in a loathsome Ditch;
And (for all Creatures love the Young
Which from their proper Loins are sprung)
To this old Mansion thee convey'd,
And in an Infant's Cradle laid:
And when the Sorc'ress plac'd thee there,
She stole away the native Heir--
Right well hast Thou, my Boy, repaid
The Obligations on thee laid,
And to thy Parents' Int'rest true
Hast prov'd thy Fortunes were thy due--
Go on--and, if thou canst, do more
(But 't may not be) than heretofore--
Keep the same Path You always trod,
And be an Enemy to God;
Apply your Fortune to oppress,
And harrass Virtue with Distress;
To hide your Blemishes use Paint,
To screen the Villain play the Saint;
Affect Religion, Church frequent,
Kneel, seem to pray, and keep up Lent--
Charity too must be display'd,
But Charity in Masquerade;
Give Alms--but not to those that need,
But only for the Gallows feed;
Whene'er you meet a preaching Thief,
Be prompt to reach him out Relief;
If Liars, Flatt'rers, Pandars, Pimps,
Or any of my vagrant Imps,
Approach Thee, to thy Mansion take,
And give them Welcome for my Sake;
But needy Merit must not dare
To hope with these thy Alms to share,
Commit that to the Bridewell-lash,
But give it neither Food nor Cash;
Distinguish'd Honour shalt thou gain
In Pand'monium, for thy Pain.
But--one Word more--My Mind misgives,
That Virtue a near Neighbour lives--
For in my search to find out Thee,
I spied in this Vicinity
A Knot of Friends, where I cou'd trace
Honour emblazon'd in their Face,
These (for their Thoughts I plainly see)
Bear no good Will to you or me;
Foolishly honest, cheap they hold
Libidinoso and his Gold,
And will maintain, to Conscience true,
Their Virtue, spite of Me and You.
Altho' your Influence be weak,
Oppose them for opposing' Sake,
Do ev'ry little Act of Spite,
And snarl, altho' You cannot bite--
Be faithful--there will come a Day,
When I thy Services will pay,
Will bring Thee to my Realm, and make
Thee Pilot of the burning Lake."

He said--and quick as Thought withdrew,
And to th' infernal Regions flew;
Blue sulph'rous streaks the Peasants scare,
Marking his passage thro' the Air--

Libidinoso left behind,
Began revolving in his Mind
His Master's Promises, and sigh'd
To have them fully ratified;
Then homeward plodded, (but, be sure,
Before he went, he kiss'd his Whore)
Resolv'd, if possible, on more
And greater Evils than before.
All vain was the Resolve--his Cup
Of Wickedness was quite fill'd up,
And no Cup can another drop
Contain, when fill'd up to the Top.

Since all Improvement was forbid,
What cou'd he do, but what he did?
Nought he diminish'd of the Charge,
But acts Hell's Minister at large.

A Pair of Adamantine Lungs,
A Throat of Brass, Fame's hundred Tongues,
Time out of Mind have been confest,
By fifty Poets, at the least,
Too little to count Hybla's Bees,
The Leaves that cloathe the Forest-Trees;
The Sands that broider Neptune's Side,
Or Waves that on his Bosom ride;
The Grains which rich Sicilia yields,
The Blades with which Spring robes the Fields;
The Stars which twinkling on the sight
Jove's Threshold make so glorious bright:
Or (if we may annex to these
Modern Impossibilities)
To reckon up the sum of Knaves
That crawl on Earth, or sleep in Graves,
To count the Prudes that crowd to Pews,
While their Thoughts ramble to the Stews,
Lords, whose sole Merit is their Place,
Ladies, whose Worth's a painted Face,
Who find my Lord has lost his Force
In Love, and sue for a Divorce;
Or to abridge, and enter down
The Names of all the Fools in Town;
Or number those who live by Ink,
And write, altho' they cannot think;
Critics, who judge, but cannot read,
And praise, or censure--as they're fee'd;
Or count each Bard by Self betray'd,
Who thought, when fondled by his Maid,
It was Melpomene that smil'd,
And mark'd him for her fav'rite Child,
But finds the Harvest of his Lines,
Is to fast twice for once he dines.

As well the Muse might one of these
Poets' Impossibilities
Assay to do, and speed as well,
As if She should attempt to tell
The Names and Characters of all
That on the Name of Satan call,
That preach, and lie, and whine, and cant,
Soldiers for Hell's Church Militant;
And use the Head, the Heart, the Hand,
To spread its Doctrines thro' the Land.
Arithmetic herself were dumb,
If task'd with such an endless Sum;
Nor wou'd the Muse, tho' one more Line
Wou'd all the Host of Hell entwine,
Bestow another drop of Ink,
To map out an infernal Sink--

Thou God of Truth and Love! excuse
The honest Anger of the Muse,
Warm in thy Cause, while She wou'd pray
That Thou from Earth wou'd'st sweep away
Such rotten Saints, who wou'd conceal
Their Fraud beneath the Name of Zeal!
Who, mask'd with spurious Piety,
Trample on Reason, Truth, and Thee,
And, while their hot Career they run,
Tread on the Gospel of thy Son!
Who, feigning to adore, make Thee
A Tyrant-God of Cruelty!
As if thy right Hand did contain
Only an Universe of Pain,
Hell and Damnation in thy Left,
Of ev'ry gracious Gift bereft,
Hence raining Floods of Grief and Woes,
On those that never were thy Foes,
Ordaining Torments for the doom
Of Infants, yet within the Womb:
By fifty false Devices more,
Which Reason never heard before,
And Methodists alone cou'd dream,
Thy boundless Goodness they blaspheme!
Who (tho' our Saviour's gracious Plan
Was to teach Happiness to Man,
By friendly Arguments to win
The World from Slavery to Sin;
For He, who all Things knows, well knew,
That they to Duty are more true,
Who from a filial Love obey,
And serve for Gratitude, than they
Who from a coward Dread of Law
Owe all their Virtue to their Awe;
Who, tho' they seem so true, and just,
So strictly faithful to their Trust,
Will, if you take the Gallows down,
Out-pilfer half the Rogues in Town).
With saucy boldness will presume
To pass th' impenetrable gloom,
And lift the Curtain which we see
Is drawn betwixt the World and Thee;
Of nought but endless Torments speak,
To frighten and appall the weak;
Dwell on the horrid Theme with glee,
And fain themselves wou'd Hangmen be;
With so much Dread their Hearers fill,
That they have neither Pow'r, nor Will,
Tho' Heav'n's the Prize, to move a Hand,
But shuddering and trembling stand.

Quench the hot Flame, O God, that burns,
And Piety to Phrenzy turns!
Let not thy holy Name be made
A Cloak to hide a pilf'ring Trade!
Nor suffer that thy sacred Word,
Be turn'd to Rhapsody absurd!
Let it not serve, like Magic Sticks,
To preface pious Jugglers' Tricks!
Root, root from Earth, these baneful weeds,
That choak Religion's wholesome Seeds!
Give them the headlong Winds to bear,
And scatter in a desart Air!
Grind them to Powder, that no more
They sprout and grow as heretofore!
Burn the rank stalks, and let the flame
Thy Garden's hot luxuriance tame,
Nor let it Flow'r, or Plant produce,
But what yields Ornament or Use!

But soft--my Muse! thy Breath recall--
Turn not Religion's Milk to Gall!
Let not thy Zeal within thee nurse
A holy Rage, or pious Curse!
Far other is the heav'nly Plan,
Which the Redeemer gave to Man,
Who taught the World in Peace to live,
And e'en our Enemies forgive!

Live then, ye Wretches! to declare,
How long our God with Men can bear!
A living Monument to be
Of the Almighty's Clemency!
Who still is good, altho' You preach
Yourselves almost 'bove Mercy's reach;
And, tho' his goodness You resist,
Can even spare a Methodist.

Available translations:

English (Original)