The downfall of Paris, and Bonaparte dethron'd/The Disconsolate Sailor
THE
DISCONSOLATE SAILOR.
When my money was gone
which I gain’d in the wars,
And the world ’gan to frown on my fate,
What matter'd my zeal,
or my honoured ſcars,
When in difference ſtood at each gate:
The face that would ſmile,
when my purſe was well lin’d,
Show’d a different aſpect to me:
And when I could naught but ingratitude find,
I fled once again to the ſea.
I thought it unwiſe to repine at my lot,
or to bear with cold looks on the ſhore,
S‘ I pack’d up the trifling remnants I got,
and a trifle, alas! was my ſtore.
A handkerchief held all the treaſure I had,
which over my ſhoulder I threw;
Awa then I trudg'd with a heart rather ſad
to join with ſome jolly ſhip’s crew.
The ſea was leſs troubled by far than my mind,
for when the wide main I ſurvey’d,
I could not help thinking the world was unkind,
and Fortune a ſlippery jade.
And I vow'd if once I could take her in tow,
I'd let the ungrateful ones ſee,
That the turbulent winds and the billows could ſhow
more kindneſs than they did to me.