THE DISCOVERY. [In the author's life we have mentioned the disappointment which he experienced under the inefficient patronage of Lord Berke. ley, chiefly from the influence of his Lordship's secretary, Mr Bush. The following lines, among other satirical effusions, were the evidence of his resentment, and probably had some share in determining the earl to get rid of so untractable a dependent, by gratifying him with a living so soon as pose sible.] When wise Lord Berkeley first came here, * Statesmen and mob expected wonders, Nor thought to find so great a peer Ere a week past committing blunders. Till on a day cut out by fate, When folks came thick to make their court, Out slipt a mystery of state, To give the town and country sport. Now enters Bush † with new state airs, His lordship's premier minister; And who, in all profound affairs, Is held as needful as his clyster. I With head reclining on his shoulder, He deals and hears mysterious chat, * To Ireland, as one of the lords justices.-H, + Bush, by some underhand insinuation, obtained the post of secretary, which had been promised to Swift.-H. | Always taken before my lord went to council.--H. While every ignorant beholder Asks of his neighbour, who is that ? With this he put up to my lord, The courtiers kept their distance due, He twitch'd his sleeve, and stole a word ; Then to a corner both withdrew. Imagine now my lord and Bush Whispering in junto most profound, Like good king Phyz and good king Ush, While all the rest stood gaping round. At length a spark, not too well bred, Of forward face and ear acute, To overhear the grand dispute ; Or from Whitehall some new express, For sure (thought he) it can't be less. My lord, said Bush, a friend and I, Disguis'd in two old threadbare coats, Ere morning's dawn, stole out to spy How markets went for hay and oats. With that he draws two handfuls out, The one was oats, the other hay; Puts this to's excellency's snout, And begs he would the other weigh. My lord seems pleas'd, but still directs By all means to bring down the rates ; Then, with a congée circumflex, Bush, smiling round on all, retreats. Our listener stood a while confus'd, But gathering spirits, wisely ran for't, Enrag'd to see the world abus'd, By two such whispering kings of Brentford, * See 66 The Rehearsal.”...H. THE PROBLEM. THAT MY LORD BERKELEY STINKS WHEN HE IS IN LOVE." 1 Did ever problem thus perplex, But still, though fix'd among the stars, And now, the ladies all are bent The ladies vanish in the smother, 13 [At the siege of Namur, in 1695, Lord Cutts commanded a body of English employed as a storming party, and displayed such cool intrepidity amidst a most tremendous fire of artillery and musquetry, that he was complimented with the name of the Salamander, as if the scene of fame and terror had been his proper element. Swift, no admirer of military merit, and unfriendly to Lord Cutts in particular, has employed his wit in deducing from his vices and follies, the name bestowed on 'him for his intrepid bravery.] As mastiff dogs in modern phrase are * From Pliny, Nat. Hist. lib. X. C. 67. lib. xxix. C. 4, VOL. XIV. |