Epilogue To The Husband His Own Cuckold Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: AABCDDCECFFFFGGDDHIJ KKLLMNONPPKKQRSSSKK

Like some raw sophister that mounts the pulpitA
So trembles a young poet at a full pitA
Unused to crowds the parson quakes for fearB
And wonders how the devil he durst come thereC
Wanting three talents needful for the placeD
Some beard some learning and some little graceD
Nor is the puny poet void of careC
For authors such as our new authors areE
Have not much learning nor much wit to spareC
And as for grace to tell the truth there's scarce oneF
But has as little as the very parsonF
Both say they preach and write for your instructionF
But 'tis for a third day and for inductionF
The difference is that though you like the playG
The poet's gain is ne'er beyond his dayG
But with the parson 'tis another caseD
He without holiness may rise to graceD
The poet has one disadvantage moreH
That if his play be dull he's damned all o'erI
Not only a damn'd blockhead but damn'd poorJ
But dulness well becomes the sable garmentK
I warrant that ne'er spoiled a priest's prefermentK
Wit's not his business and as wit now goesL
Sirs 'tis not so much yours as you supposeL
For you like nothing now but nauseous beauxM
You laugh not gallants as by proof appearsN
At what his beauship says but what he wearsO
So 'tis your eyes are tickled not your earsN
The tailor and the furrier find the stuffP
The wit lies in the dress and monstrous muffP
The truth on 't is the payment of the pitK
Is like for like clipt money for clipt witK
You cannot from our absent author hopeQ
He should equip the stage with such a fopR
Fools change in England and new fools ariseS
For though the immortal species never diesS
Yet every year new maggots make new fliesS
But where he lives abroad he scarce can findK
One fool for million that he left behindK

John Dryden



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