The Discontented Student
A True Story
Returned from college R-------gets a wife
To be the joy and comfort of his
life:
But ere the honeymoon was in the wane
He sighs for college, and
his books again
To his thought on all occasions flock:
Like Madam
Shandy, thinking of the clock.
But, sad mishap! when Phoebus gilds the
skies,
If to his favorite authors he applies,
Bright Venus throws her
cestus o'er the book;
In vain he tries upon the page to look;
As Cupid
blind, the classic page no more
Delights his raptured sight as heretofore.
Like that sagacious beast, who placed between
Two cocks of hay — one dry, the other green,
Can
neither taste; our scholar every night
Thinks of his books; and of his bride
by light.
Untasted joys breed always discontents;
Thus to his sire, his rage the
scholar vents.
"Would that in Italy I had been born,
And, early, of each
wile encumbrance shorn,
Which now seduces all my thoughts away
From Classic studies or by night, or day.
Uninterrupted then I might
have read
Or in my elbow chair, or in my bed;
Till drowsy grown, and
nodding o'er the book
Upon the enchanting page I craved to look
And then
in rapturous dreams renewed the joy
Till taking, I resumed the blest employ.
But now in vain I quit the genial bed,
My wife —