Let us all be Unhappy on Sunday
Appearance
Let us all be Unhappy on Sunday:
A Lyric for Saturday Night
- We zealots, made up of stiff clay,
- The sour-looking children of sorrow,
- While not over-jolly today,
- Resolve to be wretched tomorrow.
- We can't for a certainty tell
- What mirth may molest us on Monday;
- But, at least, to begin the week well,
- Let us all be unhappy on Sunday.
- That day, the calm season of rest,
- Shall come to us freezing and frigid;
- A gloom all our thoughts shall invest,
- Such as Calvin would call over-rigid,
- With sermons from morning to night,
- We'll strive to be decent and dreary:
- To preachers a praise and delight,
- Who ne'er think that sermons can weary.
- All tradesmen cry up their own wares;
- In this they agree well together:
- The Mason by stone and lime swears;
- The Tanner is always for leather;
- The Smith still for iron would go;
- The Schoolmaster stands up for teaching;
- And the Parson would have you to know,
- There's nothing on earth like his preaching.
- The face of kind Nature is fair;
- But our system obscures its effulgence:
- How sweet is a breath of fresh air!
- But our rules don't allow the indulgence.
- These gardens, their walks and green bowers,
- Might be free to the poor man for one day;
- But no, the glad plants and gay flowers
- Mustn't bloom or smell sweetly on Sunday.
- What though a good precept we strain
- Till hateful and hurtful we make it!
- What though, in thus pulling the rein,
- We may draw it as tight as to break it!
- Abroad we forbid folks to roam,
- For fear they get social or frisky;
- But of course they can sit still at home,
- And get dismally drunk upon whisky.
- Then, though we can't certainly tell
- How mirth may molest us on Monday;
- At least, to begin the week well,
- Let us all be unhappy on Sunday.