TO THE DEAN OF ST. PATRICK’S

Dear Sir, Since you in humble wise
  Have made a recantation,
From your low bended knees arise;
  I hate such poor prostration.

’Tis bravery that moves the brave,
  As one nail drives another;
If you from me would mercy have,
  Pray, Sir, be such another.

You that so long maintain’d the field
  With true poetic vigour;
Now you lay down your pen and yield,
  You make a wretched figure.

Submit, but do’t with sword in hand,
  And write a panegyric
Upon the man you cannot stand;
  I’ll have it done in lyric:

That all the boys I teach may sing
  The achievements of their Chiron;
What conquests my stern looks can bring
  Without the help of iron.

A small goose-quill, yclep’d a pen,
  From magazine of standish
Drawn forth, ‘s more dreadful to the Dean,
  Than any sword we brandish.

My ink’s my flash, my pen’s my bolt;
  Whene’er I please to thunder,
I’ll make you tremble like a colt,
  And thus I’ll keep you under.
                             THOMAS SHERIDAN.

 

List of poems in chronological order

List of poems in alphabetical order