THE JACOBIN.

I am a hearty Jacobin,

Who own no God, and dread no sin,

Ready to dash through thick and thin

For freedom:

And when the teachers of Chalk-Farm

Gave Ministers so much alarm,

And preach’d that kings did only harm,

I fee’d ’em.

By Bedford’s cut I’ve trimm’d my locks,

And coal-black is my knowledge-box,

Callous to all, except hard knocks

Of thumpers;

My eye a noble fierceness boasts,

My voice as hollow as a ghost’s,

My throat oft washed by factious toasts

In bumpers.

Whatever is in France, is right;

Terror and blood are my delight;

Parties with us do not excite

Enough rage.

Our boasted laws I hate and curse,

Bad from the first, by age grown worse,

I pant and sigh for univers-[[187]]

al suffrage.

Wakefield[[188]] I love—adore Horne Tooke,

With pride on Jones[[189]] and Thelwall[[190]] look,

And hope that they, by hook or crook,

Will prosper.

But they deserve the worst of ills,

And all th’ abuse of all our quills,

Who form’d of strong and gagging Bills[[191]]

A cross pair.

Extinct since then each speaker’s fire,

And silent ev’ry daring lyre,[[192]]

Dum-founded they whom I would hire

To lecture.

Tied up, alas! is ev’ry tongue

On which, conviction nightly hung,[[193]]

And Thelwall looks, though yet but young,

A spectre.[[194]]

B. O. B.