Wigs and BeardsGoodnight.
In the bad old days a bewigged country squire
Would never pay his debts, unless at cards;
Shot, angled, urged his pack through standing grain,
Horsewhipped his tenantry, snorted at the arts,
Toped himself under the table every night,
Blasphemed God with a cropful of God-damns,
Aired whorehouse French or lame Italian,
Set fashions of pluperfect slovenliness
And claimed seigneurial rights over all women
Who slept, imprudently, under the same roof.
Taxes and wars long ago ploughed them under-
'And serve the bastards right' the Beards agree,
Hurling their empties through the café window
And belching loud as they proceed downstairs.
Latter-day bastards of that famous stock,
They never rode a nag, nor gaffed a trout,
Nor winged a pheasant, nor went soldiering,
But remain true to the same hell-fire code
In all available particulars
And scorn to pay their debts even at cards.
Moreunder (which is to subtract, not add),
Their ancestors called themselves gentlemen
As they, in the same sense, call themselves artists.
-- Robert Graves (1966)
Saturday, February 09, 2002
Nearly time for me to gay shlaufen - but I have a note from Robert Graves, regarding scoundrels of old, and their modern ersatz. A little late but no worse for wear:
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