Daniel Defoe: Political Writings (Including The True-Born Englishman, An Essay upon Projects, The Complete English Tradesman & The Biography of the Author). Даниэль Дефо
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СКАЧАТЬ Was always to be bountiful inclin’d:

       Whether by his ill fate or fancy led,

       First took me up, and furnish’d me with bread:

       The little services he put me to,

       Seem’d labours, rather than were truly so.

       But always my advancement he design’d;

       For ’twas his very nature to be kind:

       Large was his soul, his temper ever free;

       The best of masters and of men to me:

       And I who was before decreed by fate,

       To be made infamous as well as great,

       With an obsequious diligence obey’d him,

       Till trusted with his all, and then betray’d him.

      All his past kindnesses I trampled on,

       Ruin’d his fortunes to erect my own:

       So vipers in the bosom bred begin,

       To hiss at that hand first which took them in;

       With eager treach’ry I his fall pursu’d,

       And my first trophies were ingratitude.

      Ingratitude’s the worst of human guilt,

       The basest action mankind can commit;

       Which, like the sin against the Holy Ghost,

       Has least of honour, and of guilt the most;

       Distinguished from all other crimes by this,

       That ’tis a crime which no man will confess;

       That sin alone, which should not be forgiv’n

       On earth, altho’ perhaps it may in heaven.

      Thus my first benefactor I o’erthrew;

       And how shou’d I be to a second true?

       The public trust came next into my care,

       And I to use them scurvily prepare:

       My needy sov’reign lord I play’d upon,

       And lent him many a thousand of his own;

       For which great interest I took care to charge,

       And so my ill-got wealth became so large.

      My predecessor Judas was a fool,

       Fitter to have been whipt and sent to school,

       Than sell a Saviour: had I been at hand,

       His Master had not been so cheap trepann’d;

       I would have made the eager Jews have found,

       For thirty pieces, thirty thousand pound.

      My cousin Ziba, of immortal fame,

       (Ziba and I shall never want a name:)

       First-born of treason, nobly did advance

       His Master’s fall, for his inheritance:

       By whose keen arts old David first began

       To break his sacred oath to Jonathan:

       The good old king ’tis thought was very loth

       To break his word, and therefore broke his oath.

       Ziba’s a traitor of some quality,

       Yet Ziba might have been inform’d by me:

       Had I been there, he ne’er had been content

       With half th’ estate, nor half the government.

      In our late revolution ’twas thought strange,

       That I of all mankind should like the change,

       But they who wonder’d at it never knew,

       That in it I did my old game pursue:

       Nor had they heard of twenty thousand pound,

       Which ne’er was lost, yet never could be found.

      Thus all things in their turn to sale I bring,

       God and my master first, and then the king;

       Till by successful villanies made bold,

       I thought to turn the nation into gold;

       And so to forgery my hand I bent,

       Not doubting I could gull the Government;

       But there was ruffl’d by the Parliament.

       And if I ‘scaped th’ unhappy tree to climb,

       ’Twas want of law, and not for want of crime;

      And now I’m grac’d with unexpected honours,

       For which I’ll certainly abuse the donors:

       Knighted, and made a tribune of the people,

       Whose laws and properties I’m like to keep well:

       The custos rotulorum of the city,

       And captain of the guards of their banditti.

       Surrounded by my catchpoles, I declare

       Against the needy debtor open war.

       I hang poor thieves for stealing of your pelf,

       And suffer none to rob you, but myself.

      The king commanded me to help reform ye,

       And how I’ll do’t, Miss —— shall inform ye.

       I keep the best seraglio in the nation,

       And hope in time to bring it into fashion;

       No brimstone whore need fear the lash from me,

       That part I’ll leave to Brother Jefferey:

       Our gallants need not go abroad to Rome,

       I’ll keep a whoring jubilee at home;

       Whoring’s the darling СКАЧАТЬ