Analysis of The Progress Of A Divine: Satire



All priests are not the same, be understood!
Priests are, like other folks, some bad, some good.
What's vice or virtue, sure admits no doubt;
Then, clergy, with church mission, or without;
When good, or bad, annex we to your name,
The greater honour, or the greater shame.

Mark how a country Curate once could rise;
Tho' neither learn'd, nor witty, good, nor wise!
Of innkeeper, or butcher, if begot,
At Cam or Isis bred, imports it not.
A Servitor he was-Of hall, or college?
Ask not-to neither credit is his knowledge.

Four years, thro' foggy ale, yet made him see,
Just his neck-verse to read, and take degree.
A gown, with added sleeves, he now may wear;
While his round cap transforms into a square.
Him, quite unsconc'd, the butt'ry book shall own;
At pray'rs, tho' ne'er devout, so constant known.
Let testimonials then his worth disclose!
He gains a cassock, beaver and a rose.
A Curate now, his furniture review!
A few old sermons, and a bottle-screw.
A Curate?-Where? His name (cries one) recite!
Or tell me this-Is pudding his delight?
Why, our's loves pudding-Does he so?-'tis he!
A Servitor;-Sure Curl will find a key.

His Alma Mater now he quite forsakes;
She gave him one degree, and two he takes.
He now the hood and sleeve of Master wears;
Doctor! (quoth they)-and lo! a scarf he bears!
A swelling, russling, glossy scarf! yet he,
By peer unqualify'd, as by degree.

This Curate learns church-dues, and law to tease,
When time shall serve, for tithes, and surplice-fees;
When 'scapes some portion'd girl from guardian's pow'r,
He the snug licence gets for nuptual hour;
And rend'ring vain her parent's prudent cares,
To sharper weds her, and with sharper shares.
Let babes of poverty convulsive lie;
No bottle waits, tho' babes unsprinkled die.
Half-office serves the fun'ral, if it bring
No hope of scarf, or hatband, gloves, or ring.
Does any wealthy fair desponding lie,
With scrup'lous conscience, tho' she knows not why?
Would cordial counsel make the patient well?
Our priest shall raise the vapours, not dispel.
His cant some orphan's piteous case shall bring;
He bids her give the widow's heart to sing:
He pleads for age in want; and while she lingers,
Thus snares her charity with bird-lime fingers.

Now in the patron's mansion see the wight,
Factious for pow'r-a son of Levy right!
Servile to 'squires, to vassals proud his mien,
As Codex to inferior Clergy seen.
He flatters till you blush; but, when withdrawn,
'Tis his to slander, as 'twas his to fawn.
He pumps for secrets, pries o'er servants' ways,
And, like a meddling priest, can mischief raise;
And from such mischief thus can plead desert-
'Tis all my patron's int'rest at my heart.
Deep in his mind all wrongs from others live;
None more need pardon, and none less forgive.

At what does next his erudition aim?
To kill the footed and the feather'd game:
Then this Apostle, for a daintier dish.
With line or net, shall plot the fate of fish.
In kitchen, what the cookmaid calls a cot;
In cellar, with the butler, brother sot,
Here too he corks; in brewhouse hops the beer,
Bright in the hall, his parts at whist appear;
Dext'rous to pack; yet at all cheats exclaiming:
The priest has av'rice, av'rice itch of gaming,
And gaming fraud:-But fair he strikes the ball,
And at the plain of billiard pockets all.
At tables now!-But oh, if gammon'd there,
The startling echoes learn, like him, to swear!
Tho' ne'er at authors in the study seen,
At bowls sagacious master of the green.
A connoisseur, as cunning as a fox,
To bet on racers, or on battling cocks;
To preach o'er beer, in boroughs, to procure
Voters, to make the 'squire's election sure:
For this, where clowns stare, gape, and grin, and baul,
Free to buffoon his function to 'em all.
When the clod justice some horse-laugh wou'd raise,
Foremost the dullest of dull jokes to praise;
To say, or unsay, at his patron's nod;
To do the will of all-save that of God.

His int'rest the most servile part he deems;
Yet much he sways, where much to serve he seems;
He sways his patron, rules the Lady most,
And, as he rules the Lady, rules the roast.

Old tradesmen must give way to new-his aim
Extorted poundage, once the steward's claim.
Tenants are rais'd; or, as his pow'r increases,
Unless they fine to him, renew no leases.
Thus tradesmen, servants, tenants, none are free;
Their loss and murmur are his gain and glee.

Lux'ry he loves; but like a priest of sense,


Scheme AABBCC DDEFXX GGHHIIJJKKLLGG DXMMGG NNXXMMOOPPOOQQPPRR LLSSTTUUXXXX CCVVFEWWPPXXHHSSYYZZOXUU1 1 2 2 3 3 CCXXGG X
Poetic Form
Metre 111101101 1111011111 1111010111 1101110101 111111111 010110101 1101010111 1101110111 110110101 1111010111 011111110 11110101110 1111011111 1111110101 0111011111 1111010101 11101111 1111011101 1010011101 1101010001 010111001 0111000101 0101111101 1111110101 1111011111 01111101 110101111 1111010111 1101011101 1011010111 010110111 1111101 1101110111 111111011 11111110011 1011011110 011010101 1101001101 1111000101 11011111 110101111 111111111 11010111 111011111 1101010101 1011101101 11111111 1101010111 11110101110 11010011110 100110101 1111011101 10110110111 1110100101 111111101 1111011111 11110110101 01010011101 0111011110 11111111 1011111101 1111001101 111110101 1101000101 110101011 1111110111 010101101 0101010101 111101101 1001111101 1111111010 011111110 0101111101 0101110101 110111111 0101011111 1111000101 11110101 001110101 11110111001 1110101101 1011010101 1111110101 1101110111 1011011111 101011111 11111111 1101111111 110110111 1111111111 1111010101 0111010101 1101111111 010101011 101111111010 01111101110 1101010111 1101011101 111110111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,304
Words 780
Sentences 53
Stanzas 10
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 14, 6, 18, 12, 26, 4, 6, 1
Lines Amount 99
Letters per line (avg) 34
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 336
Words per stanza (avg) 78
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:05 min read
103

Richard Savage

Richard Savage was an English poet. He is best known as the subject of Samuel Johnson's Life of Savage, on which is based one of the most elaborate of Johnson's Lives of the English Poets. more…

All Richard Savage poems | Richard Savage Books

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