BATH
(With grateful acknowledgments to the anonymous but urbane author of “Bath in History and Social Traditions.”)
Fair city, though King Bladud and his story
Is largely wrapt in mythologic mist
And legends of your fame in ages hoary
Are scouted by the sceptic annalist,
One century at least of crowded glory
Inspires a recent genial eulogist
And prompts a humble rhymer to rehearse
Your merits in a piece of jingling verse.
I pass the Romans, business-like invaders;
Of their enduring traces he that runs
May read elsewhere; I pass the Saxon raiders
And tales of mediæval monks and nuns,
Of leper hospitals and mud-bath waders,
And hurry on to Beaux and Belles and Buns;
Your palmy days, me judice, began
In the Augustan period of Queen Anne.
The men who planned and built your noble Abbey
Well earned the homage of a sacred bard,
Yet in your golden roll it would be shabby
Your minor worthies wholly to discard;
And though your Bun, now sugarless and flabby
And highly-priced, is sadly shrunk and marred,
The first compounder of its rich delight
Ought not to pass into eternal night.
Of your great trio, Allen, Wood and Nash,
Allen, Mæcenas-postman, leaves me cold;
He had not one redeeming vice to clash
With his array of virtues manifold;
But he was patriotic, for his cash
Freed Wood’s majestic genius, sane yet bold,
Until a new and gracious city rose;
And Nash was far the finest of the Beaux.
At least this meed of praise must we accord him,
That he restrained the mutinies of Mode;
That Wesley was the only man who floored him;
That order was the essence of his code;
That bullies feared him, that the poor adored him,
And, though in age a thorny path be trode,
For many a year none could his seat disturb,
Mounted on Folly ridden on the curb.
What famous names, what episodes romantic
Are linked with yours in Clio’s sacred shrine
Ere piety pronounced you Corybantic
And seaside bathing compassed your decline!
“Sherry” and Siddons, Hannah the pedantic,
Fielding and Walpole, how your annals shine!—
Immortal Jane, and Herschel counting bars
And drilling fiddlers—and discovering stars.
Yet even when your vogue was slowly waning
Rich sunset splendours lingered on the scene,
When Sultan Beckford in your midst was reigning
And lending you an Oriental mien;
When D’Arblay, loyal to her haunts remaining,
Extolled your beauties varied and serene;
When in the Octagon men heard Magee
And Lansdown teams rejoiced in “W. G.”
Fashion may veer; the elegant and witty—
Light come, light go—may scatter far and wide,
But still the terraced colonnaded city
Stands proudly by the silver Avon’s tide,
And scenes that move to wonder, praise and pity,
Touched gently by the hand of Time, abide;
Still, O immortal Bath, you wear your crown
Fresh in your beauty, old in your renown.