Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Late Scene At Swanage. by Thomas Moore
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A Late Scene At Swanage.

    By Thomas Moore



    [1]


            regnis EX sul ademptis.--Verg. 1827.


    To Swanage--that neat little town in whose bay
        Fair Thetis shows off in her best silver slippers--
    Lord Bags[2] took his annual trip t'other day,
        To taste the sea breezes and chat with the dippers.

    There--learned as he is in conundrums and laws--
        Quoth he to his dame (whom he oft plays the wag on),
        "Why are chancery suitors like bathers?"--"Because
        Their suits are put off, till they haven't a rag on."

    Thus on he went chatting--but, lo! while he chats,
        With a face full of wonder around him he looks;
    For he misses his parsons, his dear shovel hats,
        Who used to flock round him at Swanage like rooks.

    "How is this, Lady Bags?--to this region aquatic
    "Last year they came swarming to make me their bow,
    "As thick as Burke's cloud o'er the vales of Carnatic,
    "Deans, Rectors, D.D.'s--where the devil are they now?"

    "My dearest Lord Bags!" saith his dame, "can you doubt?
        "I am loath to remind you of things so unpleasant;
    "But don't you perceive, dear, the Church have found out
        "That you're one of the people called Ex's, at present?"

    "Ah, true--you have hit it--I am, indeed, one
        "Of those ill-fated Ex's (his Lordship replies),
    "And with tears, I confess--God forgive me the pun!--
        "We X's have proved ourselves not to be Y's."



Extra Info:
[1] A small bathing-place on the coast of Dorsetshire, long a favorite summer resort of the ex-nobleman in question and, till this season, much frequented also by gentlemen of the church.

[2] The Lord Chancellor Eldon.


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