Analysis of Ant In Office.



You tell me that my verse is rough,
And to do mischief like enough;
Bid me eschew, in honest rhymes,
Follies of countries and crimes.
You ask me if I ever knew
Court chaplains thus lawn sleeves pursue?
I meddle not with gown or lawn;
I, therefore, have no need to fawn.
If they must soothe a patron's ear,
Not I - I was not born to bear;
All base conditions I refuse,
Nor will I so debase the muse.

Though I ne'er flatter nor defame,
Yet would I fain bring guilt to shame;
And I corruption would expose,
Though all corrupted were my foes.
I no man's property invade, -
Corruption 's an unlawful trade;
So bribery also. Politicians
Should be tied down to such conditions;
If they were stinted of their tools,
Less were their train of knaves and fools.

Were such the case, let us review
The dreadful mischiefs to ensue.
Some silver services 'twould stint,
But that would aggrandise the Mint;
Some ministers find less regard,
But bring their servants more reward;
Fewer informers, fewer spies,
But that would swell the year's supplies;
An annual job or two might drop,
We should not miss it 'midst the crop;
Some pensions, haply, be refused,
The Civil List be less abused;
It might the ministry confound,
And yet the State stand safe and sound.
Next, let it well be understood
I only mean my country's good -
I wish all courtiers did the same.
I wish to bar no honest claim;
I wish the nation out of debt;
No private man had cause to fret;
Yet law and public good to be
The pole-stars of the Ministry;
I wish corruption, bribery, pension,
Were things there were no need to mention;
I wish to strike a blow at vice, -
Fall where it may, I am not nice;
Although the Law - the devil take it! -
Can scandalum magnatum make it.
I vent no scandal, neither judge
Another's conscience; on I trudge,
And with my satire take no aim,
Nor knave nor steward name by name.
Yet still you think my fable bears
Allusion unto State affairs.

I grant it does so; but, what then? -
I strike at motives, not at men.
If hands corrupted harm the nation,
I bar no reader's application.

There was an Ant, of flippant tongue,
Who oft the ears of senates wrung;
Whether he knew the thing or no,
Assurance sat upon his brow;
Who gained the post whereto he strained -
The grain-controllership attained.
But then old laws were very strict,
And punished actions derelict.
Accounts were passed by year and year,
The auditors would then appear,
And his controllership of grain
Must his accounts and stock explain.

He put a balance-sheet in - cooked,
An honest emmet o'er it looked,
And said, "The hoard of grain is low;
But the accounts themselves don't show
By any vouchers what the stocks are.
Really, such documents but mocks are."

"Sir," the controller said, "would you
Have us pass everything to view?
Divulge all matters to all eyes,
Proclaim to winds state mysteries?
'Twould lay us open to our foes;
You see all that we dare disclose;
And, on my honour, the expense
Is lavished on the swarm's defence."

They passed the balance-sheet - again
Next year's shewed "deficit of grain;"
And thus again controller pleaded:
"Much secret service has been needed,
For famines threaten: turkey broods
Have been most clamorous for foods.
Turkey invasions have cost dear,
And geese were numerous last year.
Really, these secrets told are ruin,
And tend much to the realm's undoing."

Again, without examination,
They thanked his good administration.
A third and fourth time this recurred,
An auditor would then be heard:
"Are we but tools," he said, "of rogues?
Through us corruption disembogues
Her mighty flood; for every grain
We touch we vouch at least for twain.
Where have they vanished? nay, in bribes.
They have depoverished our tribes."

Then followed an investigation,
And a report unto the nation.
The Ant was punished, and his hoard -
All that remained of it - restored.
  


Scheme Text too long
Poetic Form
Metre 11111111 01110101 11010101 1011001 11111101 11011101 11011111 1111111 1111011 11111111 11010101 11110101 11110101 11111111 01010101 11010011 11110001 010110101 110010010 111111010 1101111 10111101 0101111 0101101 11010011 111101 11001101 11110101 10010101 11110101 110011111 11111101 1101101 01011101 11010001 01011101 1111101 11011101 111100101 11111101 11010111 11011111 11010111 01110100 1101010010 011011110 11110111 11111111 10101011 11111 11110101 01010111 01110111 11110111 11111101 01010101 11111111 11110111 110101010 11110010 11111101 1101111 10110111 01010111 1101111 01101 11110101 0101010 01011101 01001101 01111 11010101 11010101 110101011 01011111 10010111 110101011 101100111 10010111 1111011 01110111 01111100 111101101 11111101 0111001 11010101 11010101 11110011 010101010 110101110 11010101 111111 10010111 01010011 101101110 011101010 01010010 11110010 01011101 11001111 11111111 110101 010111001 11111111 11110101 111101 11010010 000110010 01110011 11011101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 3,757
Words 704
Sentences 37
Stanzas 10
Stanza Lengths 12, 10, 34, 4, 12, 6, 8, 10, 10, 4
Lines Amount 110
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 298
Words per stanza (avg) 69
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:32 min read
18

John Gay

John Gay, a cousin of the poet John Gay, was an English philosopher, biblical scholar and Church of England clergyman. more…

All John Gay poems | John Gay Books

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