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George Gordon Byron - Dear Doctor, I have Read your PlayGeorge Gordon Byron - Dear Doctor, I have Read your Play
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Dear Doctor, I have read your play,     Which is a good one in its way,     Purges the eyes, and moves the bowels,     And drenches handkerchief s like towels     With tears that, in a flux of grief,     Afford hysterical relief     To shatter`d nerves and quicken`d pulses,     Which your catastrophe convulses.     I like your moral and machinery;   Your plot, too, has such scope for scenery!   Your dialogue is apt and smart;   The play`s concoction full of art;   Your hero raves, your heroine cries,   All stab, and everybody dies;   In short, your tragedy would be   The very thing to hear and see;   And for a piece of publication,   If I decline on this occasion,   It is not that I am not sensible   To merits in themselves ostensible,   But—and I grieve to speak it—plays   Are drugs—mere drugs, Sir, nowadays.   I had a heavy loss by  Manuel   Too lucky if it prove not annual—   And Sotheby, with his damn`d  Orestes   (Which, by the way, the old bore`s best is),   Has lain so very long on hand   That I despair of all demand;   I`ve advertis`d— but see my books,   Or only watch my shopman`s looks;   Still  Ivan Ina and such lumber   My back-shop glut, my shelves encumber.   There`s Byron too, who once did better,   Has sent me—folded in a letter—   A sort of—it`s no more a drama   Than  Darnley Ivan or  Kehama :   So alter`d since last year his pen is,   I think he`s lost his wits at Venice,   Or drain`d his brains away as stallion   To some dark-eyed and warm Italian;   In short, Sir, what with one and t`other,   I dare not venture on another.   I write in haste; excuse each blunder;   The coaches through the street so thunder!   My room`s so full; we`ve Gifford here   Reading MSS with Hookham Frere,   Pronouncing on the nouns and particles   Of some of our forthcoming articles,   The  Quarterly —ah, Sir, if you   Had but the genius to review!   A smart critique upon St. Helena,   Or if you only would but tell in a   Short compass what—but, to resume;   As I was saying, Sir, the room—   The room`s so full of wits and bards,   Crabbes, Campbells, Crokers, Freres and Wards,   And others, neither bards nor wits—   My humble tenement admits   All persons in the dress of Gent.,     From Mr. Hammond to Dog Dent.   A party dines with me today,   All clever men who make their way:   Crabbe, Malcolm, Hamilton and Chantrey   Are all partakers of my pantry.   They`re at this moment in discussion   On poor De Sta{:e}l`s late dissolution.   Her book, they say, was in advance—   Pray Heaven she tell the truth of France!   `Tis said she certainly was married   To Rocca, and had twice miscarried,   No—not miscarried, I opine—   But brought to bed at forty nine.   Some say she died a Papist; some   Are of opinion  that`s a hum;   I don`t know that—the fellow, Schlegel,   Was very likely to inveigle   A dying person in compunction   To try the extremity of unction.   But peace be with her! for a woman   Her talents surely were uncommon.   Her publisher (and public too)   The hour of her demise may rue,   For never more within his shop he—   Pray—was she not interr`d at Coppet?   Thus run our time and tongues away;   But, to return, Sir, to your play;   Sorry, Sir, but I cannot deal,   Unless `twere acted by O`Neill.   My hands are full—my head so busy,   I`m almost dead—and always dizzy;   And so, with endless truth and hurry,   Dear Doctor, I am yours,   JOHN MURRAY
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