British Wonders

British Wonders:

OR,

A Poetical Description of the several

PRODIGIES

AND MOST

Remarkable Accidents

That have happen’d in Britain since
the Death of

Queen ANNE.



LONDON:

Printed and Sold by John Morphew near Stationer's-Hall.
M DCC XVII.

BRITISH WONDERS, &c.

In wretched Times, when Men were givenTo mock the Church and spurn at Heaven,And Pious Saints, like Sinners, soldTheir tender Consciences for Gold,Nay, even when our Guides could takeOr break an Oath for Int'rest sake,As if no other God but Mammon,Was worship'd both by Priest and Layman,And that alike they'd no regardTo future Torment or Reward,Excepting some, the very best,Who liv'd despis'd by all the rest,And bore their Suff'rings in the faceOf Envy, with a Comly Grace,Dreading no Party Threats nor Pow'rs,But copy'd old Philosophers,And in contempt of Knaves and Fools,Kept wisely up to Vertue's Rules.'Twas then when Prodigies were grownAs common as the Sun and Moon,That e'ery Week, the Earth or Skies,With some new Wonder, fed our Eyes, And sporting Nature, to amuse us,Did startling Novelties produce us,Mocking our Archimedean SonsOf Art with strange Phæmomenons,As puz'ling to our Math'maticians,As new Distempers to Physicians,Who, with their Terms of Art, oft hideTheir Ign'rance to support their Pride,Like Pedants, who to gloss their Errors,Talk Latin to unletter'd Hearers.Tho' many wond'rous Things appear'd,And such as justly might be fear'd,To be Forerunners of some strangeDestructive Plague, or fatal Change,Like those sad Omens that foretoldThe downfal of the Jews of old;Yet all our Almanack-Professors,And Astrologick Fortune-guessers,Tho' at each Sign they stood aghast,Despis'd the threat'ning Signs when past,And deem'd each Wonder but the SportOf Nature, that presag'd no Hurt.So Sailors, when a Storm encreases,Look Pale and Fearful till it ceases;Then gath'ring Courage by degrees,They Swear and Bully Winds and Seas,And flight the Danger that beforeSo shock'd the Cowards 'till 'twas o'er.As soon as Britain had sustain'dThat fatal Loss which Heav'n has gain'd,And Parties squabbl'd to a Madness,About their Sorrows and their Gladness, A Plague unprophesy'd succeeded,That only reach'd the Horniheaded,And like a fatal Rot or Murrain,Turn'd all our Bulls and Cows to Carrion;That even Cuckolds pray'd, to pity,This Horn-plague might not reach the City,And from the Kine, who daily ranHornmad, extend itself to Man.The Leacher, tho' he's cold, we findIs always Goatishly inclin'd:And the young buxom Female Creature,As oft contracts a Pole-cat Nature.Since brutal Passions thus infect us,When Guardian Vertue does neglect us,The Wicked may, if Heaven pleases,As well be ting'd with Brutes Diseases.The Farriers now their Skill imploy'd,But still the Cows in Number dy'd,And with their Horns and Hides together,Were burnt, without reserve of Leather,To shew their Owners were almostAs frantick as the Beasts they lost.Some cunning Huxters, who had CowsOld, Dry and Lean, not worth a Souse,Tho' sound in Health, but scarce deservingOf Pasture, to prevent their Starving,These wisely knock'd 'em on the HeadBy Night, when Neighbours were in Bed,Next Day assign'd their ExpirationTo this new fatal Visitation:So bore 'em to some distant Pit,Or Ditch, for such a Purpose fit; There, to the Terror of our Isle,Consum'd 'em in their Fun'ral Pile,Then, like true Hipocrites, put onA mournful Look, as if undone,And claim'd the Sum of Forty Shilling,For e'ery Cow of Heaven's killing.A gen'rous Bounty! that destroy'dMore Cattle than the Plague annoy'd;For not a worthless Runt past Thriving,Wh'in Lanes and Commons sought her Living,But dy'd, if not of Pest, by Slaughter,Because o'th' Money that came a'ter:For Hay was dear, and Grass but scarce,Which made Lean Cattle fare the worse,And caus'd their Owners to dispatch 'em,For fear the Plague should not attack 'em.In all the filthy Skirts aroundThe Town, where nasty Scents abound,O'er-roasted Beef was now the StinkPredominant o'er Ditch or Sink;And Surloins broiling in their Flames,The Foh of Hogmen and their Dames;Burnt Horns and Hoofs, and hairy Hides,Offended e'ery Nose besides,And out-stunk all the Bulls and Bears,Old Dunghils, Night-men, Slaughterers,Jayls, Butchers Dogs and Hogs that dwellIn sweet St. James's Clerkenwel;Or all the Stinks that rise together,From Hockley-Hole, in sultry Weather.Thus English Beef, that glorious Food,Once held so preferably good, The most substantial of our Meats,And noblest of our Friendly Treats;That Flesh which makes the Briton bolderThan any Foreign Country Soldier,And gives him Strength, in time of War,To cleave a Sultan or a Czar;Yet was it now despis'd by Porters,And hungry Red-Coats in their Quarters;Dreading to catch, from Cow or Ox,The Plague, who never fear'd the Pox.So the Fair Mistress of the Town,When Young and Wholsome, will go down,But with the Crinkums once infected,She's by the meanest Rake rejected.Nor was the Flesh alone refus'd,But Milky Diets much disus'd:Pudding, that universal Dish,The Swain's Delight, the Plowman's Wish,The Housewife's Pride, the Husband's Choice,The darling Food of Girls and Boys,Now dwindl'd to such low esteem,'Twould scarce go down, tho' made of Cream;For the Horn'd Cattle running Mad,Had brought on Milk a Name so bad,That even Pudding lost its vogue,And for a Season prov'd a Drug.Pudding! the Idol of the Priest,The Farmer's constant Sunday's Feast,The Ornament of each Man's Table,Down from the Noble to the Rabble,The sole Characteristick FoodOf true-born Englishmen abroad: From whence, to good Old-England's Fame,Jack-Pudding takes his ancient Name.As the French Fool is titl'd John-Pottage, from Soops he feeds upon.And the Dutch Zany for preferringHis Fish, is nick-nam'd Pickl'd-Herring.Thus e'ery Fool is call'd, in Jest,By what his Country loves the best,That those who crowd to see the PranksOn Stages play'd by Mountebanks,May know what Country Fool attendsThe Doctor, to engage his Friends,For his assum'd or given Name,Discovers whence the Zany came.Butter, that old Balsamick Sauce,Was also now made scandalous,That even 'Prentice-Boys would flout it,And eat their very Roots without it,For fear the Cream should prove contagious,And make 'em, like the Cows, outragious;For no Distemper, Plague, or Sadness,Infects the English like to Madness.Fish now were forc'd to swim, alas,In Oil, to th' Table of His Grace,Or naked in the Dish appear,Till Butter had a time to clearIts present odious Reputation,That it might come once more in fashion;And, like some Lords turn'd out of Post,Regain the Credit it had lost.Custard, that noble cooling Food,So toothsome, wholsome, and so good, That Dainty so approv'd of old,Whose yellow surface shines like Gold;That Idol of our City Halls,Which crowns our solemn Festivals,And adds unto my Lord-May'r's Board,A Grace more pleasing than his Sword.That crusty Fort, whose Walls of Wheat,Contain such tender lusheous Meat,And us'd so often to be storm'dBy hungry Gownmen sharply arm'd,Was now, alas, despis'd as nought,And slighted wheresoe'er 'twas brought;Whilst Lumber-Pies came more in play,And bore, at Feasts, the Bell away.So in wet Seasons, when our MuttonIs e'ery where cry'd down as rotten,Cow-heel becomes a Dish of State,And climbs the Tables of the Great.O wretched Times, when People fear'dTheir Chops with Custard should be smear'd,Lest the Cow-plague should seize their Skulls,And make 'em all as mad as Bulls!So the wise Whigs, to Int'rest hearty,Abjure the Disaffected Party,Lest Tory-Breath should taint their Wits,And make 'em all turn Jacobites.The Milk-Maids now began to mournThe Brindle, Red, and Crumpl'd Horn,And dream'd at Night they saw the GhostOf e'ery Fav'rite Cow they'd lost:Then rising early, having noneTo stroke but Udders of their own: They wept in Clusters near their Houses,Like Widows parted from their Spouses,Till Tears and Pissing made a Flood,In e'ery Corner where they stood.Thus moaning, now the Cows were dead,The Loss of them and of their Bread:Some singing Ballads for support,New merry Strains with aching Heart,As Malefactors, when they're dying,Howl out a Psalm, next kin to crying:Others, their Modesty forsaking,Took up the Trade of Basket-making,And humbly ply'd for small Rewards,Among His Majesty's Foot-Guards,To gain, by Poxing and by Whoring,What they had lost by Plague or Murrain.Thus Girls of honest Means bereft,Who've nothing but their Quistrils left,Must live by Jading or by Theft.
The next Disaster that befel,Before the drooping Cows grew well,Was that unhappy Chance amongThe Scaffolds, when the Joyful ThrongWere gazing at the Grand Procession,That grac'd the pompous Coronation,Where Lords and Ladies flam'd as brightBy Day, as wand'ring Stars by Night,And where the Hanoverian LineDid all the British Race outshine,And in their Robes and Jewels dress'd,Look'd far more glorious than the rest: But as in solemn Pomp they mov'd,Much honour'd, shouted and approv'd,A Scaffold loaded with a crowdOf fond Spectators, humbly bow'dIts Props and Stancheons to the GreatSupporters of the Church and State,Whose solemn Grandeur aw'd the Boards,To fall before such mighty Lords,Proclaiming, in a crackling sound,Their Joy, as tumbling to the Ground,The only Homage Wood could payTo such a Train, on such a Day.But O! the doleful Shrieks and Cries,That of a sudden did ariseBetween both Sexes, when they foundThe Scaffold tumbling to the Ground.No Sailors in a foundring ShipHalf swallow'd in the foaming Deep,Could in their Pray'rs and Groans expressMore dreadful signals of Distress;For soon as e'er each yielding PropGave way, and Seats began to drop,Their loud Huzza's and Loyal PealsOf Joy, were turn'd to Cries and Yells;Some roaring out, My Back, my Back!Like Wretches tort'ring on the Rack;And some that met with diff'rent Harms,Bawl'd out, My Legs! or, O my Arms!All, Helter Skelter, in disorder,Some crying, Help; and others, Murder.The Ladies, who were dress'd as gayAs could be, for so bless'd a Day, Suffer'd much more in this Mischance,Than their kind Husbands or Gallants;Some losing all their Fin'ry offTheir Heads, became the Rabble's Scoff;For tho' they look'd so Plump and Young,When round with Flanders Laces hung,Yet, when unrigg'd, their Crowns appear'dAs bald, as those for Age rever'd;Whilst others, with their Heels upright,Expos'd a more crinif'rous Sight,Squeaking, with Voices almost spent,Like tender Girls in Ravishment.Some well-dress'd lofty-seated Lasses,Tumbling from high to lower Classes,O'erwhelm'd inferieur Blades and Beaus,With their hoop'd Coats and Furbiloes,Some sneaking out their Heads, bereftOf Wigs, which they behind had leftIn sacred Mansions, where could beNo search, 'thout breach of Modesty;Whilst others, who had plung'd their Locks'Twixt Sattin Skins and Holland Smocks,Brought forth about their wreaking Ears,Th'unsav'ry Dregs of Female Fears;An Accident so very spightful,That made the Suff'rers look as frightfulAs pelted Wretches, just set freeFrom rotten Eggs and Pillory.Thus crowds of Mortals struggling lay,Among the Planks, in sad dismay;Some mixing their expiring GroansWith others dismal Cries and Moans, Whilst all the neighb'ring Surgeons swarm'dAround the fatal Ruins, arm'dWith Lancets, Balsams, Rags and Plasters,Adapted to the Crowds Disasters;Each laying hold of whom they cou'd,To set their Bones, or let 'em Blood,Or do what they conceiv'd most crafty,For their own Good and Patient's Safety;Thus Surgeons, like to Lawyers, makeThe best of what they undertake;And tho' they cure our Ailings first,The After-clap proves always worst.
The next sad Chance that did ensue,More fatal than the former Two,Was that destructive Conflagration;Dreadful to human Observation,Begun, as Fame reports, by thosePreparing Fire-works, to exposeAnd burn the Effigies of the bestOf Queens, whose Mem'ry they detest,Because she strove our Wounds to heal,And bless'd Her Foes against their Will.So Drunkards, when with Wine o'ercome,Abuse their Friends that lead 'em home,And tho' the Way, they're forc'd along,Be right, they'll swear, in spight, 'tis wrong.Deep in a Cellar under Ground,Where Night was always to be found,A Work-house proper for the MakersOf whizing Squibs and bouncing Crackers, There, for some time, Hell's EngineersHad been contriving artful Fires,And dressing Puppits to delightTheir Malice on some Publick Night;But Providence, displeas'd to seeTheir mad ingrateful Mockery,Made their own Carelesness the ruinOf all the Mischiefs they'd been brewing,And by some Accident or otherTurn'd their ill Works to Smoke and Smother,Which fled before a Sou-West Wind,And left a raging Fire behind,Such as consum'd whole Streets and Lanes,And gave to sundry Men their Banes,Who lab'ring to preserve the WealthOf others, perish'd in their Health;Whilst many more, who stood to seeThe Flames, thro' Curiosity,Came lamely off, with Maims and Bruises,By Timber from the blown-up Houses.Therefore, let their Misfortunes learn us,To shun what Hazards don't concern us,And rather hear, from Friend or Stranger,What can't be seen without much Danger.Claret, that universal Wine,That makes the Poet's Fancy shine,And wins more Favours from the Fair,Than all that Man can say or swear,Was now in Pipes and Hogsheads burn'd,And into Fun'ral Liquors turn'd,Or coddl'd Hogwash, fit to bringTo Gossips at a Christening; Whilst Thousands that ador'd the Juice,As Heaven's Gift for Humane Use,Curs'd the invidious Fire that boil'dThe noble Creature 'till 'twas spoil'd,And wept to see the drougthy FlamesDrink Wine by Tuns, so near the Thames,When Water from the swelling Current,Had sooner cool'd the raging Tyrant.Brandy, that Cordial of the Town,In fiery Streams flow'd up and down,And turn'd (if Poets leave may take)Each Kennel to a Stygian Lake;Whilst Coachmen, Carmen, Porters, Seamen,Trulls, Orange-Drabs and Oyster-Women,Licking their Lips, in clusters stood,And griev'd to see the burning Flood.(In Frosty Morns the best of Drinks)Ran flaming down the dirty Sinks,When they'd have all been glad, I'll warrant,To've stop'd the Fury of the Torrent,But that it flow'd as scalding hot,As Pottage boiling o'er the Pot.So have I seen a Hound stand peepingAt roasting Beef and melted Dripping,And like a pregnant Gossip long,But durst not touch it with his Tongue.Tobacco, that Narcotick Funk,That fluxes Mortals till they're drunk,And tempts the marry'd Sot to slight.The Nuptial Blessings of the Night,Was now, instead of Pipes of Clay,Consum'd in Hogsheads as it lay; From whence ascended Fumes so choaking,As if the Dev'l himself was smoaking,And, knocking out his Pipes, forgotTo tread the stinking Ashes out,But left 'em burning on the Ground,To poyson all his Friends around.Sugar, whose pleasing taste impartsSuch Life to Puddings, Pies and Tarts,And stops the Cries of swaddl'd Babes,When pop'd into their Mouths by Dabs.Sugar, the grand Support that bearsUp all Confectionary Wares,And makes the Wife's Loblolly soothThe kind Uxorious Husband's Tooth,In Loads now perish'd in the Flames,And burnt in Dunghils near the Thames,Till melted and reduc'd to Wax,Then stoll'n away by crafty Quacks,And sold as new-discover'd Physick,To cure Consumption, Cough, or Phthysick;A Nostrum also never failing,In any other inward Ailing.So Dogs-turd, when it's dry'd, becomesA Med'cine rare for ulcer'd Gums,And of all Powders is the bestFor a Sore-Throat. Probatum est.But why our Quack-AdministratorsOf Physick, use such trifling Matters,Is 'cause they're cheap to him that gives 'em,And dear toth' Patient that receives 'em.In short, all sorts of Foreign Goods,Hemp, Cotton, Linen, Drugs and Woods, Tea, Coffee, Spices, Turky-Leather,Convey'd from distant Countries hither,All shar'd one Fate and burnt together,Till Hellborn Powder, which beganThis flagrant Mischief unto Man,Subdu'd the Tyrant, God be prais'd,And stop'd the Fire itself had rais'd.So Claret, tho' it makes us bright,And oft inflames us all the Night,A Hair of the same Dog next Morning,Is best to quench our fev'rish burning.Now, had the Tories play'd the Fool,And dizen'd up a Pastboard Nol,Or been preparing Squibs and Crackers,To vex our Mug-house Undertakers,And had their insolent OffenceProduc'd so sad a Consequence,The dreadful Flames had then been thoughtA Judgment, or, at least, a Plot;Then Cloak and Band would soon have taught,How wicked Works are brought to nought,And prov'd by Decalogue, verbatim,That God will punish those that hate him.But when their own Designs miscarry,And from their good Intentions vary,They wisely make the cross Events,The Lord's Probation of his Saints,And cite each holy Text that provesHow God chastiseth whom he loves.
Next to this Fire, whose raging FlamesInsulted and defy'd the Thames, And, spight of Engines and of Water,Committed such a dreadful slaughter,The distant Heav'ns began to showNew Wonders to the World below,And seem'd to threat the whole CreationWith Deluge or with Conflagration.The Moon who us'd to rule the Night,And bless us with her silver Light,Not only prov'd Unceremonious,And turn'd her dark backside upon us,But like a Mask obscur'd the FaceO'th' Sun in his diurnal Race,That even Men and Brutes were frighted,To find themselves, by Day, benighted.The Wicked gaz'd in woful plight,And shiver'd at the dismal Sight,Reflecting on their past Offences,And all their sinful Negligences;Whilst Atheists, who before believ'dNo God, at once were undeceiv'd,And lifting up their Eyes to Heaven,Devoutly pray'd to be forgiven:The Godly even shook with Fear,And thought the Day of Judgment near;Nor could their old pretended PleasOf Grace secure their Consciences,But in their Faces we could seeGuilt, Terror, and Despondency;As if convinc'd they were no moreElected than the Scarlet Whore,But that their Sins were full as greatAs theirs they stile the Reprobate. So forward Fools who vainly boastOf Strength and Resolution most,When Danger's near, grow pale and sad,For want of what they thought they had.The Cattle in their Pastures Low'd,And did in Herds together crowd,As if surpris'd to see the LightSo early vanish into Night.The Poultry from their Walks adjourn'd,And to their several Roosts return'd,Whilst their proud Mates that stalk'd before,Clap'd Wings and falsly crow'd the Hour.Like drunken Watchmen, when they sally,At Midnight, from some Darkhoufe Ally.The Birds from Seeded Lands withdrew,And into Woods and Hedges flew,As if the Darkness made 'em fearSome sad destructive Storm was near,Whilst purblind Bats and Mooney'd Owls,Forsook their hollow Trees and Holes,And round Church Steeples took their flight,Hooting and Squeaking as if Night.The frighted Swains and delving Clowns,Fled from the Fields to neigb'ring Towns,And left their Flocks, their Plows and Teams,With aching Hearts and trembling Limbs,Dreading the Omen might portendThe wicked World's immediate End,Before their Souls could be prepar'dTo meet the awful Judge they fear'd:Nor could their shallow Brains conceive,That Nature such a shock could give, But, self-convicted, shiv'ring stood,And pray'd to God, the only Good,That He'd vouchsafe to shew 'em Mercy,Who only knew him but by hear-say,Till absent Phœbus started forth,And once more bless'd the teeming Earth,That rowling Fire which daily givesNew Life to e'ery Thing that lives;Then sinful Wretches, who had feltSuch Stings and Terrors from their Guilt,As soon as the Surprise was o'er,Grew vile and daring as before.So Criminals in Prison thrown,Seem conscious of the Ills they've done;But when enlarg'd they prove but worse,And still Rogue on without remorse.The next Unhappiness that fell onThis Nation, was the North Rebellion,In which half English and half Scot,Combin'd to do they knew not what.However, they in Friendship join'd,And seem'd, at first, alike inclin'd,Till Danger star'd them in the Face,And then they squinted diff'rent ways,Making themselves a noisy Rabble,As much confus'd as those at Babel;Contending for the Martial Sway,Not knowing whom they should obey:Some drown'd in Wine, some drunk with Malt,Some crying, March, and others, Halt;One Part, thro' Pride or Folly, breakingThe Measures others were for taking. Like Hounds ill-coupl'd ne'er agreed,But hinder'd one another's speed;Excepting those that had a fence,Or foresight of the Consequence,Who when they found their rash DesignWanted both Arms and Discipline,They then repenting, made a Slip,And fled the Town like frighted Sheep,Leaving their Chief, who should have Led,To drink his Butter'd-Ale in Bed.Thus Bullies bluster, till their EyeBeholds the shocking Danger nigh,And then with Scandal and Disgrace,They fly from what they durst not face,For Cowards always are too craftyTo doat on Honour more than Safety.Just so the Preston Herd, unskill'dTo keep the Town or win the Field,Before the Royal Troops appear'd,Talk'd big, as if they nothing fear'd,And with good Wine and Nappy warm'd,Threaten'd much more than they perform'd;For few had Courage to withstandThe Danger, when 'twas near at hand,But rather than to boldly runThe risque of what themselves begun,To please and flatter Cow'rdly Nature,Postpon'd one Hazard for a greater.Two gallant Chiefs they had, 'tis plain,That is, two Heads, but ne'er a Brain;For had their Conduct and DiscretionBut prov'd as great as their Submission, They might, perchance, have grown much strongerAnd sav'd their Necks a little longer:Yet had they fought like Men of Mettle,And bravely stood a hardy Battle,They'd not perform'd so great a Wonder,As in their tamely knocking under.No doubt the Heroes first design'dTo fight, when they at Preston join'd,Tho' half the Weapons of their Forces,Were only Whips to flog their Horses;But when they saw their bad Condition,Few Arms and little Ammunition,Led on promiscuously together,By him that knew the use of neither,The Champions rather chose to yieldToth' Gallows, than to die i'th' Field;Because one Danger of the twoWas farthest from their present View;Forgetting, he that boldly drawsHis Sword against the Nations Laws,Must, if he means to win the Day,Press on, and fling the Sheath away:For he who'gainst the Crown is fighting,And hopes for Pardon by submitting,Is like the Fool who first provokes,The Lyon with disdainful, Strokes,Then tamely bowing to his Jaws,Craves Mercy of his Teeth and Claws.Thus, those that dare to undertakeRebellion, if they once look back,Themselves they ruine, lose their End,And mar the Cause they would defend. No sooner had the Captive Crowd,Their stubborn Necks to Cæsar bow'd,As if at first they meant no more,Than to aggrandize Sov'reign Pow'r,Or that they thought the Nation blest,And, Statesman like, rebell'd in Jest;Not to disturb, but serve the EndsOf Government, like trusty Friends,By wheedling in the Disaffected,To be Drawn, Hang'd, and then Dissected.I say, no sooner had they shownTheir great Submission to the Throne,And render'd to the Royal Forces,Their Arms, their Money, and their Horses,But they were ty'd on Scrubs and Tits,Whose Hempen Bridles had no Bits,Nor worthless Saddles Stirrups on,To rest their pendant Feet upon:But rode, like Sancho on his Ass,Or Hostlers, kicking Jades to Grass,Who with their Riders often falter,Because they're guided by the Halter.Thus Insurrections in a Realm,Prove Thorns to those that rule the Helm,Till crush'd and then the Victor makesHis Market of the Fools he takes.In Triumph thus the CavalcadeOf Rebels were to London led,Guarded on e'ery Side by thoseWho when they conquer'd spar'd their Blows,To make their gallant Foes amends,For acting so like Bosom Friends, And fixing in our Jarring Isle,The Cause they vainly hop'd to spoil.As foolish Parents often makeThose Matches they attempt to break,And by their want of timely Care,Ruine the Child they would prefer.Now all the Jayls about the Town,Were cram'd with Rebels of Renown,The Tow'r with Lords, who mourn'd their Fate,And rash Proceedings, when too late;Whilst Criminals of Low'r Degree,Fill'd Newgate, Fleet, and Marshalsea,Where now they felt, as well as saw,The Fangs and Tushes of the Law,To which they tamely had submitted,Blam'd by their Friends, by Foes unpity'd.In this sad plight, unhappy Creatures,Loaded with heavy Chains and Fetters,They were confin'd to eat and sleep,Like Negroes in a Guinea Ship;Till some, to terrify the Nation,Were try'd and doom'd to Decollation;And others sentenc'd to resignTheir wretched Lives in Hempen Twine.Thus Rebels, when they lose the Day,Support the Pow'r they disobey;But if Success attends their Pride,They make the Gallows change its Side.For 'tis the Vict'ry, not the Cause,That steers the Justice of the Laws,And in each rash domestick Quarrel,Disposes both of Hemp and Laurel. Now bald-pate Winter shiv'ring rear'dHis wrinkl'd Brows and hoary Beard,And flying Southward from the North,In Anger breath'd cold Weather forth;Puff'd, as he made uncommon speed,And by the Way kill'd Herb and Weed;Did on the Clouds with Passion blow,And turn'd their Rain to flakes of Snow,Congeal'd Earth's Surface in a trice,And Rivers chang'd to Rocks of Ice,That working Tradesmen and their Spouses,Forsook their Terra firma Houses,And with old Blankets, Poles and Sheets,On Frozen Thames built Lanes and Streets,Where many Trades and Crafts of HandWere follow'd, in contempt of Land;And Hackny Whores and Coaches ply'dWith more Success than in Cheapside;Tho' Winds that made 'em blow their Nails,In Reason might have cool'd their Tails.But Lust is such a warm Desire,It feels no Cold, and needs no Fire;And rather than abstain from Vice,Will Sin, tho' on a Bed of Ice.So vicious Dogs, who slyly runAt harmless Sheep, and pull 'em down,Ne'er leave the Sport, tho' beat and bang'd,But still love Mutton till they're hang'd.The Thames was now the Mart or Fair,For e'ery sort of common Ware.Here Names were Printed, Medals Stamp'd,New Garments sold, and Old new vamp'd, Young Lasses spoil'd by Rakes and Bullies,And old ones starv'd for want of Cullies;Base Rings, and Spelter Trinkets soldTo Fools, for Silver and for Gold;And to the great reproach of France,Damn'd English Spirits vouch'd for Nantz:Besides rare Wines of e'ery sort,White, Claret, Sherry, Mountain, Port,Tho' none of't e'er had cross'd the Seas,Or from the Grape deriv'd its Lees,But made at Home, 'twixt Chip and Dash,Of Sugar, Sloes, and Grocer's Trash,Or Cyder dy'd with Cochineal,If Fame their Secrets can reveal.Here Beaus appear'd with Ladies fine,To toy and fool away their Coin,In hopes the Fair might slip awry,And blushing show a Leg or Thigh.For she that on the Ice will venture,May chance to turn up all God sent her,And by one heedless Fall discoverThe hidden Bait that charms her Lover.Here Neptune's Slaves, who ply'd the Ferries,And us'd to row the Town in Wherries,Made Whigwams now of Tilts and Sails,And dealt in Brandy, Wines and Ales,To gain by Ice what they had lostBy want of Water and by Frost.So common Jilts, those drudging Jades,When Winter Age has spoil'd their Trades,Take Brothels near some Chanc'ry Inn,And deal in Coffee, Whores and Gin. The Dutchmen, tho' to Cold inur'd,Who in our Harbours liv'd Aboard.Those Sandy Brandybottle Boors,Those brawny Slaves to Sails and Oars,With Rats-tail Locks, Thrum Woollen Caps,And pissburnt Whiskers round their Chaps,Now left their frozen Decks and Shrouds,Where piercing Winds congeal'd their Bloods,And nimbly scating on the Ice,Thaw'd their numb'd Limbs by Exercise,And show'd us how their Lords at Home,With Fish to Market go and come;Who tho' they help to Rule the State,Think it no Shame to sell their Scate.No Wonder, since there's no such thingAs Honour, where there is no King;For Honour, every Body knows,From Crowns originally flows:And where there's no Crown'd-Head to give it,No Man can merit or receive it.Besides, where Honour has no place,There's nothing scandalous or base,That carries Int'rest in its face.
The Streets of London now were fill'dWith heaps of Dirt, and Snow congeal'd;Some nicely modell'd into Form,By Art, to keep Industry warm:Here, o'er a frozen Kennel, stoodA Passant Lyon carv'd in Mud,Whose Teeth, that fortify'd his Jaws,Were broken Pipes and Lobster's Claws, Which made the King of Beasts appearSo fierce, so threatning and severe,That all the Mob that came about him,Paid Homage, and were proud to shout him.So Indians homely Statues frame,Then Worship, 'em in Jos's Name.Believing from their ugly Form,They've Pow'r to do their Makers harm.In the next Street, perhaps, appear'dA Frostwork Bull, by Butchers rear'd,Whose Horns, that grac'd his frizzl'd Top,Were pointed tow'rds some Cuckold's Shop,Which serv 'd his Helpmate for a Reason,To keep him close the Frosty Season,For fear the Rabble should agreeTo Point, and cry aloud, That's he.So when a Skimington comes by,Each Scolding Housewife looks awry,And to her Husband cries, My Dear,Prithee come in, and stay not here,I wonder you can take delightTo gaze at such a foolish Sight.Thus guilty Conscience always fliesThe Rod that scourges human Vice;And even Sinners, who would passFor Saints of a superior Class,At Church will on the Preacher frown,To hear their darling Sins cry'd down.Yet all will others Faults disclose,But think the Priest and Poet Foes,If they presume to lash the CrimesOf Impious Men in wicked Times. Thus num'rous Figures made of Dirt,As Children do of Clay, for Sport,Adorn'd the Kennels of each Street,To make the Passage more compleat.That Riding-Hoods and Clogs might moveAbout the grand Affairs of Love,Without the danger of a Slip,To sprain a Leg or bruise a Hip,Or cause their Crupper-Bones to payObedience to the frozen Way;And that the Sharping Tribe, who rangeThe Nooks and Allies near the Change,Might scowre about the Town, t'amuseBelieving Fools with Lying News;Who make themselves the Tools and SlavesOf Cunning, Cheating, Jobbing Knaves,That daily study to disguiseThe face of Truth with Impious Lies,And, Devil like, support, we see,Their Int'rest by their Villany.The Watchmen too vouchsaf'd to stoopAnd build Nocturnal Hovels up,With Kennel-Dirt and Snow together,To fence their Worships from the Weather,That they might Sit, Drink, Swear and Prate,Like Midnight Magistrates, in State,And Lurk, like hungry Wolves, to preyOn Drunkards that should reel that way.Now crafty Glasiers threw aboutTheir Foot-Balls to the Rabble-Rout,And sent their Youngsters to BombardTheir Neighbours, whilst the Frost was hard. Oft have I heard of Quarrels pick'd,And Tradesmen out of Bus'ness kick'd,But the wise Glasiers change the Scene,And kick themselves, not out, but in.Week after Week the Winter strengthen'd,And froze more sharply as it lengthen'd,That the poor Girls were forc'd to useDutch Stoves in old St. Barthol'mews,To keep their Maidenheads from freezing,The Weather was so cold and teazing.Marriage, that comfortable Vow,Could ne'er be more approv'd than now;For as in mild delightful Weather,Int'rest and Love bring Fools together,So now the most prevailing CharmThat made us Wed, was to be warm:Nay, some so very Cold were grown,They could no longer lie alone,But crept together, hugg'd and kiss'd,Without remembrance of the Priest.As hungry Gluttons eat apace,Till cloy'd, and never think of Grace.The Old complain'd of Coughs and Gouts,And crawl'd about with dripping Snouts,Vowing Dame Nature ne'er had dealt 'emSuch Weather, since their Age had gelt 'em.Beggars crept up and down, poor Souls,Cursing the Price of Bread and Coals,And in Expressions too severe,Damn'd those that kept them up so dear,Thus Providence, to whom we oweAll we enjoy, and all we know, In e'ery Dispensation, findsSome pleas'd, and some with grumbling Minds;Whilst the good Christian sits at Ease,And bends to all that Heav'n decrees.
The next surprising Scene, this Year,Did in the Northern Heav'ns appear,Where, after Sun-set, did ariseStrange Coruscations in the Skies.At first a sullen Cloud ascendedI'th' North, which tow'rds the West extended,And sailing gently with the Wind,Eclips'd a seeming Fire behind,For round its Edges we could seeA smoaky pale Lucidity,As if the Cloud arose to hideSome Blazing-Star on t'other side.At length, to entertain our View,The Sable Curtain burst in two,And belching forth a fiery TrainOf flaming Sulphur, clos'd again.Thus did it shut and open thrice,Darting its Lightning cross the Skies,And then, like huddl'd Fire and Smoke,Into a strange Confusion broke,Venting on e'ery side new Light,That bolted forth in Streams upright,Like blazing Rockets that displayTheir Fury as they make their way,Till Waves of Light'ning fill'd the Space,And rowl'd, like Seas, from place to place, The Heav'ns presenting to our View,Each Moment, something that was new,And thro' the Skies such Flashes hurl'd,As if design'd to fire the World,And Crystalize this dirty Mass,Into, a Globe of shining Glass,So make the same, by Conflagration,A Planet for the next Creation.From Sun-set to the break of Day,Did these Celestial Fireworks play,Whilst Crowds of Mortals stood below,Beholding the tremendous Show.Some harden'd Sinners seem'd to gaze,With Pleasure on the scatter'd Rays,As if the Wonder was no morePortentous than a rainy Show'r.Others more conscious of the baseAtheistick Guilt of Human Race,With Terror struck, beheld the Light,And trembl'd at the gastly Sight,Believing it portended someDestructive Plague to Christendom,Or bloody Contest, that might lay,The World in one Aceldema.Astrologers, those skilful Noddies,That watch and read the Heav'nly Bodies,To make their knowing Selves more certain,In telling Female Fools their Fortune,Climb'd up aloft, and stood for Hours,On Steeples, Battlements, and Tow'rs,That they might there behold, the better,These puzz'ling wondrous Works of Nature. All lugging out, to view the Light,Their various Instruments of Sight;By which they did discern, no doubt,What others saw as well without.Thus many Hours they gaz'd in vain,And spy'd and peep'd, and spy'd again:Returning, when they'd done, not quiteSo Wise as if they'd slept all Night,Contending who should give the bestAccount of what had spoil'd their Rest. Great Bear
and little
Bear.
Some wisely said, the Northern Bears,Were fall'n together by the Ears,And in their Rage, their angry EyesStruck Fire, and sparkl'd thro' the Skies.Others, who saw the Cause more plain,Affirm'd, that Charles had left his Wain,B'ing dry, to beg a Draught of Liquor,From old Aquarius's Pitcher;And that the resty Jades, his Horses,Had, in his Absence, turn'd their Arses,And kicking with their Shoes of Steel,Throw'd Light'ning from each clashing Heel,Some, who believ'd themselves no lessExpert than others, at a guess,Conjectur'd, these amusing StreamsOf Light, were but the Rays or BeamsOf some portentous Blazing-Star,That skulk'd below our Hemisphere,Whose flaming Beard would soon arise,Toth' Terror of our English Eyes.Instead of which, the Light declin'd,And we no Blazing-Star could find; Which shews, that those wise Albumazers,Who on the Heav'ns have long been Gazers,In spight of Mathematick Rules,May err, as well as other Fools.The Scots, among us, seem'd delighted,To see their Southern Friends so frightedAt Nature's Sportings, that ariseSo frequent in the Northern Skies,And when they brandish in the Air,Are stil'd, The Pritty Dancers, there;No more regarded when they shine,Than Light'ning underneath the Line.So Strombulo, or Ætna's Flames,Fright not the neighb'ring Clowns or Dames;But such a Mount among us here,Would raise our Wonder and our Fear.Others, in Nature's Works more learn'd,The Cause with greater Skill discern'd,And borr'wing Terms from Doctor Wallis,Call'd it, Aurora Borealis.But that can only happen here,When Days are long and Nights are clear,Near th' Æstal Solstice, when the SunJust shines beneath the Horizon;And tho' his Face be out of sight,His neighb'ring Rays diffuse a Light,And faintly gild the Northern Skies,As to his rising Point he flies.But that Phænomenon which scar'dOur sinful Land, in March appear'd,When Sol, 'twixt Setting and Returning,Could give us here no Northern Morning. But Men of Art, who proudly aimAt universal Praise and Fame,Must, true or false, their Judgment show,In Matters they profess to know,Or Fools would think the Learn'd but muddyProficients in the Arts they study.Thus most Mens excellency liesIn puzzling those they find less Wise.By that alone the Gown and Band,Gain, of the Crowd, the upper hand,In Things that neither understand.
No sooner did this Wonder cease,Or fade, as Day-light did encrease,But Fame from Ireland did reportAn Omen of another sort,Consisting of two mighty ShoalsOf monstrous Fish, as big as Bulls,Who meeting on the Irish Coast,Most fiercely charg'd each others Host,Fighting a Battle near the Shore,That dy'd the Ocean with their Gore,And chang'd, by their repeated Valour,The Sea-green, to a Sanguine Colour.Like angry Rams they clash'd their Heads,Rebounding in their watry Beds,Casting aloft, from batter'd Snouts,And broken Gills, such crimson Spouts,As if they spew'd up Claret Wine,Or fought in Blood, instead of Brine.Some, large as Elephants, display'dHuge Tushes sprouting from the Head. By force of which they over-runTheir Foes, and eat 'em when they'd done.
Others, like Ships in stormy Weather,Fell foul, Broad-side and Side together,And Jostl'd till the biggest Foe,Made the Less plow the Seas below.So Armies, with their Foot and Horse,Subdue their weaker Foes by force,And make the Cause, which they espouse,Not good by Reas'ning, but by Blows.
Thus mighty Fish with Fish contended,Some rising up, whilst some descended,Boldly relieving one another,As one brave Soldier would his Brother,Whilst wounded Monsters swam on Shore,For Breath, and perish'd in their Gore.Nor did one Day decide the Quarrel,Or give to either Host the Laurel,But as the Sun return'd his Light,They still renew'd their bloody Fight,Till length of Time and loss of Blood,Made all the Scaly Troops think goodTo leave the Empire of the MainUnsettl'd, till they met again.That future Contests might decideThe right of Rule, for which they try'd.Thus as proud Heroes fight on Shore,And struggle for superior Pow'r,So Monsters battle in the Sea,For needful Food and Sovereignty. Now Zephyrus with Anger swell'd,And with his Breath the Tide repell'd,Forcing the gentle Thames to flyThose Bounds she us'd to occupy;And with a fierce and rapid Motion,T' incorp'rate with the briny Ocean,Where She for sev'ral Days remained,And left her native Channel drain'dSo dry, where Barges us'd to float,That Numbers cross'd without a Boat,And in their Walks upon the Strand,Found Things of Value in the Sand,Which Thieves into the Thames had tost,Or some by Carelesness had lost.Now Ladies walk'd where Streams should flow,And Boats and Barges us'd to Row;There exercis'd their nimble Heels,On Sandy Beds for Fish and Eeles,And where Thames Salmon, when beset,Lay skulking to avoid the Net.The Boatmen now forsook their Stations,And chang'd their Rowing Occupations,Carr'd heavy Loads, like Men of Stature,And ply'd by Land, instead of Water.As Whores decay'd and past their Labours,Turn Bawds, and so assist their Neighbours.Nor did this boist'rous Wind alone,Blow Rivers dry, that Eastward run,But forc'd the Sea to break its Bounds,And swallow sundry Tracts of Grounds:Huge Barns it overset with ease,Blow'd Houses down, and plow'd up Trees, And made the rowling Ocean riseSo near the Arches of the Skies,That sundry Vessels dug their Graves,And founder'd in the clashing Waves,Whilst Crowds contended to devourThe Shipwrecks that were thrown ashore.As Women do on Armies wait,To Plunder those that meet their Fate.Tiles from the tops of Houses blown,And Chimney-Bricks came ratt'ling down,Whilst frighted Mortals skulk'd below,In dread of some destructive Blow.Till Providence restrain'd the StormFrom doing Mankind further Harm,And once more bless'd our longing Eyes,With gentle Winds and pleasing Skies.
One Wonder more, from distant ClimesCame over, in these sinful Times,A num'rous Flight of Foreign Birds,With pointed Bills as sharp as Swords,Webfooted, of the Water kind,Were hither driven by the Wind,And in two Columns did appear,Like wing'd Battalions in the Air,And shrieking loud began a Fight,Astonishing to human sight,Which they maintain'd, at least, an Hour,With all the fierceness in their Pow'r:Some falling headlong to the Ground,Were dead upon the Surface found, And others in the Battle maim'd,Were taken up, not dead, but lam'd:Like bleeding Cocks with wounded Eyes,Still pecking, tho' too weak to rise,Twisting their Necks about to findThe Foe that struck 'em Lame or Blind.Thus for some time they fought together.Tho' all seem'd Birds of the same Feather,Till one Side had obtain'd the Laurel,And put a Period to their Quarrel,Then all those Civil Heats and Jars,That kindl'd these domestick WarsAmong the Birds, that seem'd to beOf one divided Family,Were of a sudden at an end,And e'ery Foe became a Friend.Then those that did before appearIn diff'rent Armies in the Air,Seem'd all united into oneDark Body that eclips'd the Sun,Hov'ring aloft, for some time a'ter,In Friendship, without further slaughter,Till a fresh Storm began to rise,And blacken the transparent Skies.Such as had driven, heretofore,The Trojans on the Lybick Shore;And then the Birds, by Wind and Weather,Were blown from hence, the Lord knows whither.So when domestick Feuds and Fears,Set jarring Nations by the Ears,The Parties struggle for Command,Till one Side gains the upper-hand: Then they who're worsted, wave their Spight,And tamely with their Foes unite.
These are the Wonders we have seen,Since Britain has Interr'd her Queen:But what these Prodigies forebode,Whether our Evil or our Good,I'll leave to those that read the Heavens,And guess by Sixes and by Sevens,Who, by great Chance, some Truths may give us,Or with officious Lies deceive us.For Arts, by which they gain their Ends,And Planets, like unfaithful Friends,Are most deceitful when we need 'em,Or else they Blockheads are that read 'em.

FINIS.

This work was published before January 1, 1930, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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