I had you for a servant, once, Dick Brome; And you performed a servant's faithful parts: Now, you are got into a nearer room, Of fellowship, professing my old arts. And you do do them well, with good applause, Which you have justly gained from the stage, By observation of those comic laws Which I, your master, first did teach the age. You learned it well; and, for it, served your time, A prenticeship: which few do nowadays. Now each court hobby-horse will wince in rhyme; Both learned, and unlearned, all write plays. It was not so of old: men took up trades That knew the crafts they had been bred in, right: An honest Bilbo-smith would make good blades, And the physician teach men spew, or shite; The cobbler kept him to his nall; but, now He'll be a pilot, scarce can guide a plough. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPECIAL PLEADING by SIDNEY LANIER SONNET; OXFORD, 1916 by GEORGE SANTAYANA TO THE SHADE OF PO CHU-I by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS THE LITTLE BOY LOST, FR. SONGS OF INNOCENCE by WILLIAM BLAKE LINCOLN, THE MAN OF THE PEOPLE by EDWIN MARKHAM THE UNKNOWN GOD by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |