THE DISTRESED POET (Painting By William Hogarth, (1741)
In a dingy attic garret, he sits
on a bed in his nightgown,
quill in hand. A hungry infant
lies unattended, crying on the bed.
An impoverished second-rate
scribbler, he longs for fame
and fortune like Alexander Pope
and other writers of the day.
He scratches his head,
searching for radiance
through metaphors of awe,
but the words elude him.
His pregnant wife
sits darning clothes,
surprised by a milkmaid
demanding payment.
Their room is crude,
with uneven floors,
broken windows
and cracked walls.
Their cupboard bare
with only a scrounging
mouse and dog stealing
remains of food on a plate
But the poet lives his dream:
He has pipe, tobacco, a mug
of beer, an ill-fitting wig
and lace cuffs drying by the fire.
A gentleman’s sword at his feet,
and an overhead map:
“Gold Mines Of Peru,”
feed his fantasy.