Skip to content
Linespedia

The Phantom Curate. A Fable

Topics: classic

A BISHOP once I will not name his see     Annoyed his clergy in the mode conventional;     From pulpit shackles never set them free,     And found a sin where sin was unintentional.     All pleasures ended in abuse auricular     The Bishop was so terribly particular.     Though, on the whole, a wise and upright man,     He sought to make of human pleasures clearances;     And form his priests on that much-lauded plan     Which pays undue attention to appearances.     He couldn't do good deeds without a psalm in 'em,     Although, in truth, he bore away the palm in 'em.     Enraged to find a deacon at a dance,     Or catch a curate at some mild frivolity,     He sought by open censure to enhance     Their dread of joining harmless social jollity.     Yet he enjoyed (a fact of notoriety)     The ordinary pleasures of society.     One evening, sitting at a pantomime     (Forbidden treat to those who stood in fear of him),     Roaring at jokes, sans metre, sense, or rhyme,     He turned, and saw immediately in rear of him,     His peace of mind upsetting, and annoying it,     A curate, also heartily enjoying it.     Again, 't was Christmas Eve, and to enhance     His children's pleasure in their harmless rollicking,     He, like a good old fellow, stood to dance;     When something checked the current of his frolicking:     That curate, with a maid he treated lover-ly,     Stood up and figured with him in the "Coverley!"     Once, yielding to an universal choice     (The company's demand was an emphatic one,     For the old Bishop had a glorious voice),     In a quartet he joined an operatic one.     Harmless enough, though ne'er a word of grace in it,     When, lo! that curate came and took the bass in it!     One day, when passing through a quiet street,     He stopped awhile and joined a Punch's gathering;     And chuckled more than solemn folk think meet,     To see that gentleman his Judy lathering;     And heard, as Punch was being treated penalty,     That phantom curate laughing all hyaenally.     Now at a picnic, 'mid fair golden curls,     Bright eyes, straw hats, bottines that fit amazingly,     A croquet-bout is planned by all the girls;     And he, consenting, speaks of croquet praisingly;     But suddenly declines to play at all in it     The curate fiend has come to take a ball in it!     Next, when at quiet sea-side village, freed     From cares episcopal and ties monarchical,     He grows his beard, and smokes his fragrant weed,     In manner anything but hierarchical     He sees and fixes an unearthly stare on it     That curate's face, with half a yard of hair on it!     At length he gave a charge, and spake this word:     "Vicars, your curates to enjoyment urge ye may;     To check their harmless pleasuring's absurd;     What laymen do without reproach, my clergy may."     He spake, and lo! at this concluding word of him,     The curate vanished no one since has heard of him.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"A BISHOP once I will not name his see..."

"The Phantom Curate. A Fable" is a quintessential example of William Schwenck Gilbert's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"When I was a lad I served a term     As office boy to an Attorney's firm.     I cleaned the windows and I swept the floor,     And I polished u"

"Take a pair of sparkling eyes,     Hidden, ever and anon,     In a merciful eclipse     Do not heed their mild surprise     Having passed th"

"Of all the good attorneys who     Have placed their names upon the roll,     But few could equal BAINES CAREW     For tender-heartedness and so"

"A monarch is pestered with cares,     Though, no doubt, he can often trepan them;     But one comes in a shape he can never escape -     The im"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"When I was a lad I served a term     As office boy..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.