Classic and Contemporary Poetry
SOLILOQUY ON AN EMPTY PURSE, by MARY JONES First Line: Alas, my purse! How lean and low! Last Line: And gently rhyming rats to death. Subject(s): Retail Trade; Wealth; Stores; Shops; Shopkeepers; Riches; Fortunes | ||||||||
ALAS, my Purse! how lean and low! My silken Purse! what art thou now! Once I beheld -- but stocks will fall -- When both thy ends had wherewithal. When I within thy slender fence My fortune placed, and confidence; A poet's fortune! -- not immense: Yet, mixed with keys, and coins among, Chinked to the melody of song. Canst thou forget, when, high in air, I saw thee fluttering at a fair? And took thee, destined to be sold, My lawful Purse, to have and hold? Yet used so oft to disembogue, No prudence could thy fate prorogue. Like wax thy silver melted down, Touch but the brass, and lo! 'twas gone: And gold would never with thee stay, For gold had wings, and flew away. Alas, my Purse! yet still be proud, For see the Virtues round thee crowd! See, in the room of paultry wealth, Calm Temperance rise, the nurse of health; And Self-Denial, slim and spare, And Fortitude, with look severe; And Abstinence, to leanness prone, And Patience, worn to skin and bone: Prudence and Foresight on thee wait, And Poverty lies here in state! Hopeless her spirits to recruit, For every Virtue is a mute. Well then, my Purse, thy sabbaths keep; Now thou art empty, I shall sleep. No silver sounds shall thee molest, Nor golden dreams disturb my breast. Safe shall I walk with thee along, Amidst temptations thick and strong; Catched by the eye, no more shall stop At Wildey's toys, or Pinchbeck's shop; Nor cheapening Payne's ungodly books, Be drawn aside by pastry-cooks: But fearless now we both may go Where Ludgate's mercers bow so low; Beholding all with equal eye, Nor moved at -- 'Madam, what d'ye buy?' Away, far hence each worldly care! Nor dun nor pick-purse shalt thou fear, Nor flatterer base annoy my ear. Snug shalt thou travel through the mob, For who a poet's purse will rob? And softly sweet in garret high Will I thy virtues magnify; Outsoaring flatterers' stinking breath, And gently rhyming rats to death. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ALL LIFE IN A LIFE by EDGAR LEE MASTERS FOUR POEMS ABOUT JAMAICA: 3. A HAIRPIN TURN ABOVE READING, JAMAICA by WILLIAM MATTHEWS IMAGINE YOURSELF by EVE MERRIAM THE PROPHET by LUCILLE CLIFTON I AM FIFTY-TWO YEARS OLD' by KENNETH REXROTH LAST VISIT TO THE SWIMMING POOL SOVIETS by KENNETH REXROTH PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR AS A YOUNG ANARCHIST by KENNETH REXROTH AN EPISTLE TO LADY BOWER [BOWYER] by MARY JONES EPISTLE FROM FERN HILL by MARY JONES STELLA'S EPITAPH (WHICH AUTHOR HOPES WILL LIVE AS LONG AS SHE DOES) by MARY JONES |
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