Читать книгу The Works of Lord Byron, Vol. 7. Poetry - George Gordon Byron - Страница 14

JEUX D'ESPRIT AND MINOR POEMS, 1798-1824
AN ODE21 TO THE FRAMERS OF THE FRAME BILL.22

Оглавление

1

Oh well done Lord E – n! and better done R – r!23

Britannia must prosper with councils like yours;

Hawkesbury, Harrowby, help you to guide her,

Whose remedy only must kill ere it cures:

Those villains; the Weavers, are all grown refractory,

Asking some succour for Charity's sake —

So hang them in clusters round each Manufactory,

That will at once put an end to mistake.24


2

The rascals, perhaps, may betake them to robbing,

The dogs to be sure have got nothing to eat —

So if we can hang them for breaking a bobbin,

'T will save all the Government's money and meat:

Men are more easily made than machinery —

Stockings fetch better prices than lives —

Gibbets on Sherwood will heighten the scenery,

Shewing how Commerce, how Liberty thrives!


3

Justice is now in pursuit of the wretches,

Grenadiers, Volunteers, Bow-street Police,

Twenty-two Regiments, a score of Jack Ketches,

Three of the Quorum and two of the Peace;

Some Lords, to be sure, would have summoned the Judges,

To take their opinion, but that they ne'er shall,

For Liverpool such a concession begrudges,

So now they're condemned by no Judges at all.


4

Some folks for certain have thought it was shocking,

When Famine appeals and when Poverty groans,

That Life should be valued at less than a stocking,

And breaking of frames lead to breaking of bones.

If it should prove so, I trust, by this token,

(And who will refuse to partake in the hope?)

That the frames of the fools may be first to be broken,

Who, when asked for a remedy, sent down a rope.


[First published, Morning Chronicle, Monday, March 2, 1812.]

[See a Political Ode by Lord Byron, hitherto unknown as his production, London, John Pearson, 46, Pall Mall, 1880, 8º. See, too, Mr. Pearson's prefatory Note, pp. 5, etc.]

23

[Richard Ryder (1766-1832), second son of the first Baron Harrowby, was Home Secretary, 1809-12.]

24

Lord E., on Thursday night, said the riots at Nottingham arose from a "mistake."

The Works of Lord Byron, Vol. 7. Poetry

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