Ancient Poems, Ballads and Songs of England | Page 6

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belong?Unto the pleasures of those days.?At seven years old I was a child,?And subject then to be beguiled.
At two times seven I went to learn?What discipline is taught at school:?When good from ill I could discern,?I thought myself no more a fool:?My parents were contriving than,?How I might live when I were man.
At three times seven I waxed wild,?When manhood led me to be bold;?I thought myself no more a child,?My own conceit it so me told:?Then did I venture far and near,?To buy delight at price full dear.
At four times seven I take a wife,?And leave off all my wanton ways,?Thinking thereby perhaps to thrive,?And save myself from sad disgrace.?So farewell my companions all,?For other business doth me call.
At five times seven I must hard strive,?What I could gain by mighty skill;?But still against the stream I drive,?And bowl up stones against the hill;?The more I laboured might and main,?The more I strove against the stream.
At six times seven all covetise?Began to harbour in my breast;?My mind still then contriving was?How I might gain this worldly wealth;?To purchase lands and live on them,?So make my children mighty men.
At seven times seven all worldly thought?Began to harbour in my brain;?Then did I drink a heavy draught?Of water of experience plain;?There none so ready was as I,?To purchase bargains, sell, or buy.
At eight times seven I waxed old,?And took myself unto my rest,?Neighbours then sought my counsel bold,?And I was held in great request;?But age did so abate my strength,?That I was forced to yield at length.
At nine times seven take my leave?Of former vain delights must I;?It then full sorely did me grieve -?I fetched many a heavy sigh;?To rise up early, and sit up late,?My former life, I loathe and hate.
At ten times seven my glass is run,?And I poor silly man must die;?I looked up, and saw the sun?Had overcome the crystal sky.?So now I must this world forsake,?Another man my place must take.
Now you may see, as in a glass,?The whole estate of mortal men;?How they from seven to seven do pass,?Until they are threescore and ten;?And when their glass is fully run,?They must leave off as they begun.
Poem: THE YOUNG MAN'S WISH.
[From an old copy, without printer's name; probably one from the Aldermary Church-yard press. Poems in triplets were very popular during the reign of Charles I., and are frequently to be met with during the Interregnum, and the reign of Charles II.]
If I could but attain my wish,?I'd have each day one wholesome dish,?Of plain meat, or fowl, or fish.
A glass of port, with good old beer,?In winter time a fire burnt clear,?Tobacco, pipes, an easy chair.
In some clean town a snug retreat,?A little garden 'fore my gate,?With thousand pounds a year estate.
After my house expense was clear,?Whatever I could have to spare,?The neighbouring poor should freely share.
To keep content and peace through life,?I'd have a prudent cleanly wife,?Stranger to noise, and eke to strife.
Then I, when blest with such estate,?With such a house, and such a mate,?Would envy not the worldly great.
Let them for noisy honours try,?Let them seek worldly praise, while I?Unnoticed would live and die.
But since dame Fortune's not thought fit?To place me in affluence, yet?I'll be content with what I get.
He's happiest far whose humble mind,?Is unto Providence resigned,?And thinketh fortune always kind.
Then I will strive to bound my wish,?And take, instead of fowl and fish,?Whate'er is thrown into my dish.
Instead of wealth and fortune great,?Garden and house and loving mate,?I'll rest content in servile state.
I'll from each folly strive to fly,?Each virtue to attain I'll try,?And live as I would wish to die.
Poem: THE MIDNIGHT MESSENGER; OR, A SUDDEN CALL FROM AN EARTHLY GLORY TO THE COLD GRAVE.
In a Dialogue between Death and a Rich Man; who, in the midst of all his Wealth, received the tidings of his Last Day, to his unspeakable and sorrowful Lamentation.
To the tune of Aim not too high, {1} &c.
[The following poem, and the two that immediately follow, belong to a class of publications which have always been peculiar favourites with the peasantry, in whose cottages they may be frequently seen, neatly framed and glazed, and suspended from the white-washed walls. They belong to the school of Quarles, and can be traced to the time when that writer was in the height of his popularity. These religious dialogues are numerous, but the majority of them are very namby-pamby productions, and unworthy of a reprint. The modern editions preserve the old form of the broadside of the seventeenth century, and are adorned with rude woodcuts, probably copies of ruder originals -
? 'wooden cuts Strange, and uncouth; dire faces, figures dire, Sharp-kneed, sharp-elbowed, and lean-ankled too, With long and ghostly shanks, forms which once seen, Can never be forgotten!'--WORDSWORTH'S Excursion.]
DEATH.
Thou wealthy man of large possessions here,?Amounting to
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