JOHN GAY 1685-1732 GAY has been one of my perplexities. Can I put him anywhere among our poets and if anywhere, where, and how? When I search for proofs of his title to a place, I can discover but two or three songs to give the merest colour to a claim. Without his name to them, I think it doubtful how I should have classed even them. At highest they would have had to be content with a corner among the Waifs and Strays. Yet, omit Gay from the noble assembly of Poets! I should blush before the Shade of Pope. Certainly Swift would quit the party, and prefer Limbo with, to Elysium without, him! The man manifestly was a poet. Poets in any age would have loved him, and have insisted on keeping him in their fellowship. So, there he must abide; to be made the best of. The comfort, since he has to be there, is that any twentieth-century reader will find, as found Pope, Bolingbroke, Swift, Peterborough, Addison, Atterbury, and Prior, besides Queen Caroline, in the eighteenth, that whatever his rank poetically, he is himself very good company indeed. Go with him fishing, with the fly, not Izaak Walton's bait: Around the steel no tortur'd worm shall twine, I warrant he will provide pleasant sport with him, though in vain you cast the feather'd hook With pliant rod athwart the pebbled brook.1 Are you curious in feminine adornments, of early eighteenthcentury fashion? Accompany him without more heed than he personally takes of his warning not to dare The toilette's sacred mysteries declare. He will show you no little of the nursery of charms, With him, in instructive Trivia, explore the Town he knew so well. You must not mind, however, being, though in St. James's Street itself, jostled at night off flinty, lanternless pavements with open sewers, by brawny chairmen, who the wall command or by the bully, coward at heart, who with assuming pace, Cocks his broad hat, edg'd round with tarnish'd lace.3 Even from the safe pages of a book, long before your promenade is over, you will sigh thankfully for having been born centuries later, in the days of stalwart police, and gas lamps. Never was there a more complaisant fancy. It produced, at will, didactic discourses, epistles, eclogues, and the Beggar's Opera. From it fables, too, flowed by the score, in easy cheerful verse, with irreproachable morals for the diversion and, we will hope, edification, of numberless generations of childhood, down, at all events, to mine. He was the philosopher and showman of the nursery, with his Elephant and the Bookseller, the Monkey who had seen the World, the Courtier and Proteus, the Jugglers, the Hare and Many Friends, and a whole menagerie besides ! At the same time, his sly innuendoes in the famous Opera alarmed a Ministry, and took the public by storm. Snatches of verse in it have been incorporated into the language ; for instance, the parental lament over a wrongheaded daughter: I wonder any man alive will ever rear a daughter ! For she must have both hoods and gowns, and hoops to swed her pride, With scarfs and stays, and gloves and lace, and she'll have men beside; And when she 's drest with care and cost, all-tempting, fine and gay, As men should serve a cucumber, she flings herself away; 4 and the petulant embarrassment of a too attractive gallant : How happy could I be with either, To neither a word will I say.5 Whatever the topic, it reeled itself off into rhyme. It might be a useful Receipt for Stewing a knuckle of veal You may buy it, or steal; 6 or a panegyric on the charms of a Wokingham innkeeper's daughter : The heart when half wounded is changing, Occasionally this born trifler was pleased to coquet with the Muse of Poetry a little more in accordance with direct conventions. He wrote words to Handel's airs in the Serenata of Acis and Galatea. Everybody is familiar with them, if not with the authorship. There is Acis's song : Love in her eyes sits playing, And warbling in her breath ; and it is well matched by Polypheme's : O ruddier than the cherry ! O sweeter than the berry! O Nymph more bright Than moonshine night, No lily has such lustre; Yet hard to tame As raging flame, And fierce as storms that bluster. 9 What grace in each without the least attempt at sense ! In the latter respect we might have found relief in emerging upon the ballad on Nelly : Oh! the turn'd neck, and smooth white skin, Of lovely dearest Nelly ! For many a swain it well had been For when as Nelly came to France- Across the Tuilleries each glance Kill'd Frenchmen by whole dozens.10 But unfortunately, though Dr. Johnson assigns it to Gay, probably it is by Arbuthnot, on Miss Nelly Bennett. At all events, Gay touches his high-water mark, for sheer poetic power, inclusive of a sufficiency of coherence, in the ballad of Sweet William's Farewell to Black-eyed Susan, certainly his own : All in the Downs the fleet was moor'd, Rock'd with the billow to and fro, So the sweet lark, high pois'd in air, Shuts close his pinions to his breast- O Susan, Susan, lovely dear, My vows shall ever true remain; Let me kiss off that falling tear ; Believe not what the landmen say, Who tempt with doubts thy constant mind. Yes, yes, believe them when they tell thee so, |