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Thomas Gray '1716…1771'





VERSES ON A CAT



Clubby! thou surely art; I ween;

A Puss of most majestic mien;

So stately all thy paces!


With such a philosophic air

Thou seek'st thy professorial chair;

And so demure thy face is!



And as thou sit'st; thine eye seems fraught

With such intensity of thought

That could we read it; knowledge

Would seem to breathe in every mew;

And learning yet undreamt by you

Who dwell in Hall or College。



Oh! when in solemn taciturnity

Thy brain seems wandering through eternity;

What happiness were mine

Could I then catch the thoughts that flow;

Thoughts such as ne'er were hatched below;

But in a head like thine。



Oh then; throughout the livelong day;

With thee I'd sit and purr away

In ecstasy sublime;

And in thy face; as from a book;

I'd drink in science at each look;

Nor fear the lapse of time。



Charles Daubeny '1745…1827'





EPITAPH ON A HARE



Here lies; whom hound did ne'er pursue;

Nor swifter greyhound follow;

Whose foot ne'er tainted morning dew;

Nor ear heard huntsman's hallo;



Old Tiney; surliest of his kind;

Who; nursed with tender care;

And to domestic bounds confined;

Was still a wild Jack…hare。



Though duly from my hand he took

His pittance every night;

He did it with a jealous look;

And; when he could; would bite。



His diet was of wheaten bread;

And milk; and oats; and straw;

Thistles; or lettuces instead;

With sand to scour his maw。



On twigs of hawthorn he regaled;

On pippins' russet peel;

And; when his juicy salads failed;

Sliced carrot pleased him well。



A Turkey carpet was his lawn;

Whereon he loved to bound;

To skip and gambol like a fawn;

And swing his rump around。



His frisking was at evening hours;

For then he lost his fear;

But most before approaching showers;

Or when a storm drew near。



Eight years and five round…rolling moons

He thus saw steal away;

Dozing out all his idle noons;

And every night at play。



I kept him for his humor's sake;

For he would oft beguile

My heart of thoughts that made it ache;

And force me to a smile。



But now; beneath this walnut…shade

He finds his long; last home;

And waits; in snug concealment laid;

Till gentler Puss shall come。



He; still more aged; feels the shocks

From which no care can save;

And; partner once of Tiney's box;

Must soon partake his grave。



William Cowper '1731…1800'





ON THE DEATH OF MRS。 THROCKMORTON'S BULLFINCH



Ye Nymphs! if e'er your eyes were red

With tears o'er hapless favorites shed;

O share Maria's grief!

Her favorite; even in his cage;

(What will not hunger's cruel rage?)

Assassined by a thief。



Where Rhenus strays his vines among;

The egg was laid from which he sprung;

And though by nature mute;

Or only with a whistle blessed;

Well…taught; he all the sounds expressed

Of flageolet or flute。



The honors of his ebon poll

Were brighter than the sleekest mole;

His bosom of the hue

With which Aurora decks the skies;

When piping winds shall soon arise

To sweep away the dew。



Above; below; in all the house;

Dire foe alike of bird and mouse;

No cat had leave to dwell;

And Bully's cage supported stood;

On props of smoothest…shaven wood;

Large…built and latticed well。



Well…latticed; … but the grate; alas!

Not rough with wire of steel or brass;

For Bully's plumage sake;

But smooth with wands from Ouse's side;

With which; when neatly peeled and dried;

The swains their baskets make。



Night veiled the pole … all seemed secure …

When; led by instinct sharp and sure;

Subsistence to provide;

A beast forth sallied on the scout;

Long…backed; long…tailed; with whiskered snout;

And badger…colored hide。



He; entering at the study…door;

Its ample area 'gan explore;

And something in the wind

Conjectured; sniffing round and round;

Better than all the books he found;

Food; chiefly; for the mind。



Just then; by adverse fate impressed

A dream disturbed poor Bully's rest;

In sleep he seemed to view

A rat; fast…clinging to the cage;

And; screaming at the sad presage;

Awoke and found it true。



For; aided both by ear and scent;

Right to his mark the monster went …

Ah; Muse! forbear to speak

Minute the horror that ensued;

His teeth were strong; the cage was wood …

He left poor Bully's beak。



O had he made that too his prey!

That beak; whence issued many a lay

Of such mellifluous tone;

Might have repaid him well; I wote;

For silencing so sweet a throat;

Fast stuck within his own。



Maria weeps; … the Muses mourn; …

So; when by Bacchanalians torn;

On Thracian Hebrus' side

The tree…enchanter Orpheus fell;

His head alone remained to tell

The cruel death he died。



William Cowper '1731…1800'





AN ELEGY ON A LAP…DOG



Shock's fate I mourn; poor Shock is now no more:

Ye Muses! mourn; ye Chambermaids! deplore。

Unhappy Shock!  Yet more unhappy fair;

Doomed to survive thy joy and only care。

Thy wretched fingers now no more shall deck;

And tie the favorite ribbon round his neck;

No more thy hand shall smooth his glossy hair;

And comb the wavings of his pendent ear。

Let cease thy flowing grief; forsaken maid!

All mortal pleasures in a moment fade:

Our surest hope is in an hour destroyed;

And love; best gift of Heaven; not long enjoyed。

Methinks I see her frantic with despair;

Her streaming eyes; wrung hands; and flowing hair;

Her Mechlin pinners; rent; the floor bestrow;

And her torn fan gives real signs of woe。

Hence; Superstition! that tormenting guest;

That haunts with fancied fears the coward breast;

No dread events upon this fate attend;

Stream eyes no more; no more thy tresses rend。

Though certain omens oft forewarn a state;

And dying lions show the monarch's fate;

Why should such fears bid Celia's sorrow rise?

For; when a lap…dog falls; no lover dies。

Cease; Celia; cease; restrain thy flowing tears。

Some warmer passion will dispel thy cares。

In man you'll find a more substantial bliss;

More grateful toying and a sweeter kiss。

He's dead。  Oh! lay him gently in the ground!

And may his tomb be by this verse renowned:

Here Shock; the pride of all his kind; is laid;

Who fawned like man; but ne'er like man betrayed。



John Gay '1685…1732'





MY LAST TERRIER



I mourn 〃Patroclus;〃 whilst I praise

Young 〃Peter〃 sleek before the fire;

A proper dog; whose decent ways

Renew the virtues of his sire;

〃Patroclus〃 rests in grassy tomb;

And 〃Peter〃 grows into his room。



For though; when Time or Fates consign

The terrier to his latest earth;

Vowing no wastrel of the line

Shall dim the memory of his worth;

I meditate the silkier breeds;

Yet still an Amurath succeeds:



Succeeds to bind the heart again

To watchful eye and strenuous paw;

To tail that gratulates amain

Or deprecates offended Law;

To bind; and break; when failing eye

And palsied paw must say good…bye。



Ah; had the dog's appointed day

But tallied with his master's span;

Nor one swift decade turned to gray

The busy muzzle's black and tan;

To reprobate in idle men

Their threescore empty years and ten!



Sure; somewhere o'er the Stygian strait

〃Panurge〃 and 〃Bito;〃 〃Tramp〃 and 〃Mike;〃

In couchant conclave watch the gate;

Till comes the last successive tyke;

Acknowledged with the countersign:

〃Your master was a friend of mine。〃



In dreams I see them spring to greet;

With rapture more than tail can tell;

Their master of the silent feet

Who whistles o'er the asphodel;

And through the dim Elysian bounds

Leads all his cry of little hounds。



John Halsham '18 …





GEIST'S GRAVE



Four years! … and didst thou stay above

The ground; which hides thee now; but four?

And all that life; and all that love;

Were crowded; Geist! into no more?



Only four years those winning ways;

Which make me for thy presence yearn;

Called us to pet thee or to praise;

Dear little friend! at every turn?



That loving heart; that patient soul;

Had they indeed no longer span;

To run their course; and reach their goal

And read their homily to man?



That liquid; melancholy eye;

From whose pathetic; soul…fed springs

Seemed surging the Virgilian cry;

The sense of tears in mortal things …



That steadfast; mournful strain; consoled

By spirits gloriously gay;

And temper of heroic mould …

What; was four years their whole short day?



Yes; only four! … and not the course

Of all the centuries yet to come;

And not the infinite resource

Of Nature; with her countless sum



Of figures; with her fulness vast

Of new creation evermore;

Can ever quite repeat the past;

Or just thy little self restore。



Stern law of every mortal lot!

Which man; proud man; finds hard to bear;

And builds himself I know not what

Of second life I know not where。



But thou; when struck thine hour to go;

On us; who stood despondent by;

A meek last glance of love didst throw;

And humbly lay thee down to die。



Yet would we keep thee in our heart …

Would fix our favorite on the scene;

Nor let thee utterly depart

And be as if thou ne'er hadst been。



And so there rise these lines of verse

On lips that rarely form them now;

While to each other we rehearse:

Such ways; such arts; such looks hadst thou!



We stroke thy broad brown paws again;

We bid thee to thy vacant chair;

We greet thee by the window…pane;

We hear thy scuffle on the stair;



We see the flaps of thy large ears

Quick raised to ask which way we go;

Crossing the frozen lake; appears

Thy small black figure on the snow!



Nor to us only art thou dear;

Who mourn thee in thine English home;

Thou hast thine absent master's tear;

Dropped by the far Australian foam。



Thy memory lasts bot

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