Page:Modern poets and poetry of Spain.djvu/310

264 Well, at the least he has had his whim: Much be the good it will do to him! If when such a thing he least expects, His house should tumble upon his head, Because a doubloon Anton neglects To give for mending the roof instead, The hole some rat had made in the rim, Much be the good it will do to him! If should some crusty reader exclaim Over these lines,—What a wretched style! What a bad taste to make it his aim! My pen more gracefully could the while Have made the verse go easy and trim, Much be the good it will do to him!