The Poor Man's Prayer

THE
POOR MAN's
PRAYER.
ADDRESSED
To THE EARL OF CHATHAM
An ELEGY.

By SIMON HEDGE, A KENTISH LABOURER
LONDON;: Printed for T.PAYNE, near the Mews-Gate. 1766
[Page 3]

1. THE Poor Man's PRAYER, &c.

AMIDST the more important toils of state,
The counsels lab'ring in thy patriot soul,
Tho' Europe from thy voice expeet her fate,
And thy keen glance extend from pole to pole,
O CHATHAM, nurs'd in ancient virtue's lore,
To these sad strains incline a fav'ring ear ;
Think on the GOD, whom Thou, and I adore,
Nor turn unpitying from the Poor Man's Prayer.
[Page 4]
Ah me! how blest was once a peasant' s life!
No lawless passion swell'd my even breast;
Far from the stormy waves of civil strife,
Sound were my slumbers, and my heart at rest.
I ne'er for guilty, painful pleasures rov' d,
But taught by nature, and by choice to wed,
From all the hamlet cull'd whom best I lov'd,
With her I sltaid my heart, with her my bed"
To gild her worth I ask'd no wealthy power,
My toil could feed her, and my arm defend;
In youth, or age, in pain, or pleasure's hour,
The same fond husband, father, brother, friend.
And she, the faithful partner of my care,
When ruddy evening streak'd the Western sky,
Look'd towards the uplands, if her mate was there,
Or thro' the beech-wood cast an anxious eye.
[Page 5]
Then, careful matron, heap' d the maple board
With savoury herbs, and pick'd the nicer part
From such plain. food as Nature could afford,
Ere simple nature was debauch' d by art.
While I, contented with my homely cheer,
Saw round my knees my prattling children play;
And oft with pleas' d attention sat to hear
The little history of their idle day.
But ah ! how chang'd the scene ! on the cold stones,
Where wont at night to blaze the chearful fire,
Pale famine sits, and counts her naked bones,
Still sighs for food, still pines with vain desire.
My faithful wife with ever streaming eyes
Hangs on my bosom her dejected head ;
My helpless infants raise their feeble cries,
And from their father claim their daily bread.
[Page 6]
Dear tender pledges of my honest love,
On that bare bed b'ehold your brother lie;
Three tedious days with pinching want he strove,
The fourth, I saw 'the helpless cherub die.
Nor long shall ye remain. With visage sour
Our tyrant lord commands us from our home ;
And arm'd with cruel laws coercive power
Bids me and mine o'er barren mountains roam
Yet never, CHATHAM, have I 'pass'd a day
In riot's orgies, or in idle ease ;
Ne'er have I sacrific'd to sport and play,
Or wish' d a pamper'd appetite to please.
Hard was my fare, and constant was my toil,
Still with the morning's orient light I rose,
Fell'd the stout oak, or rais'd the lofty pile,
Parch'd in the sun, in dark December froze.
[Page 7]
Is it, that nature with a niggard hand
Withholds her gifts from these once favour' d plains?
Has GOD, in vengeance to a guilty land,
Sent dearth and famine to her lab'ring swains?
Ah, no; yon hill, where daily sweats my brow,
A thousand stocks, a thousand herds adorn ;
Yon field, where late I drove the painful plough,
Feels all her acres crown'd with wavy corn.
But what avails, that o'er the furrow' d soil
In autumn's heat the yellow harvests rise,
If artificial want elude my toil,
Untasted plenty wound my craving eyes?
What profits, that at distance I behold
My wealthy neighbour's fragrant smoke ascend,
If still the griping cormorants withhold
The fruits which rain and genial seasons send
[Page 8]
If those fell vipers of the public weal,
Yet unrelenting on our bowels prey;
If still the curse of penury we feel,
And in the midst of plenty pine away?
In every port the vessel rides secure,
That wafts our harvest to a foreign shore;
While we the pangs of pressing want, endure,
The sons of strangers ,riot on our store.
O generous CHATHAM, slop those fatal sails,
Once more with outstretch'd arm thy Britons save ;
The unheeding crew but waits for fav'ring gales, .
O stop them, e'er they stem Italia's wave.
From thee alone I hope for instant aid,
'Tis thou alone canst save my children's breath;
O deen1. not little of our cruel need,
Ohaste to help us, for delay is death.
[Page 9]
So may nor spleen, nor envy blast thy name,
Nor voice profane thy patriot acts deride ;
Still may'st thou stand the first in hon'est same,
Unstung by folly, vanity, or pride.
So may thy languid limbs with strength be brac'd,
And glowing health support thy active foul ;
With fair renown thy public virtue grac' d,
Far as thou bad'st Britannia's thunder roll.
Then joy to thee, and to thy children peace,
The grateful hind shall drink from plenty's horn:
And while they share the cultur'd land's increase,
The Poor shall bless the day when PITT was born.

FINIS

This is a selection from the original text

Keywords

corn, dearth, famine, harvest, penury, plenty

Source text

Title: The Poor Man's Prayer

Author: Simon Hedge

Publisher: T. Payne

Publication date: 1766

Edition: 1st Edition

Place of publication: London

Provenance/location: This text was transcribed from images available at Eighteenth Century Collections Online: http://www.gale.com/primary-sources/eighteenth-century-collections-online/

Digital edition

Original author(s): Simon Hedge

Language: English

Selection used:

  • 1 ) pages 3 to 9

Responsibility:

Texts collected by: Ayesha Mukherjee, Amlan Das Gupta, Azarmi Dukht Safavi

Texts transcribed by: Muhammad Irshad Alam, Bonisha Bhattacharya, Arshdeep Singh Brar, Muhammad Ehteshamuddin, Kahkashan Khalil, Sarbajit Mitra

Texts encoded by: Bonisha Bhattacharya, Shreya Bose, Lucy Corley, Kinshuk Das, Bedbyas Datta, Arshdeep Singh Brar, Sarbajit Mitra, Josh Monk, Reesoom Pal

Encoding checking by: Hannah Petrie, Gary Stringer, Charlotte Tupman

Genre: Britain > poetry

For more information about the project, contact Dr Ayesha Mukherjee at the University of Exeter.

Acknowledgements