Page:The Works of Lord Byron (ed. Coleridge, Prothero) - Volume 7.djvu/94

60 5.

He rode upon a Camel's hump

Through Araby the sandy,

Which surely must have hurt the rump

Of this poetic dandy.

His rhymes are of the costive kind,

And barren as each valley

In deserts which he left behind

Has been the Muse of Gally.

6.

He has a Seat in Parliament,

Is fat and passing healthy;

And surely he should be content

With these and being wealthy:

But Great Ambition will misrule

Men at all risks to sally,—

Now makes a poet—now a fool,

And we know which—of Gally.

7.

Some in the playhouse like to row,

Some with the Watch to battle,

Exchanging many a midnight blow

To Music of the Rattle.

Some folks like rowing on the Thames,

Some rowing in an Alley,

But all the Row my fancy claims

Is rowing of my Gally. April 11, 1818.