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Nothing to Eat

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Horatio Alger, Thomas Chandler Haliburton

Nothing to Eat

“I’ll nibble a little at what I have got.”





—“My appetite’s none of the best.

And so I must pamper the delicate thing."



—The least mite will suffice:



A side bone and dressing and bit of the breast.



The tip of the rump—that’s it—and one of the fli’s"



The Argument



   THOUGH famine prevails not at all in the city;

   Though none of starvation have died in the street;

   Yet many there are now exciting our pity,

   Who’re daily complaining of nothing to eat.





   The every-day cry and the every-day fare,

   That’s every day heard where the Livewells are dining,

   Is nothing to eat, or else nothing to wear,

   Which naked and starving rich Merdles are whining.





   There’s Kitty Malone—Mrs. Merdle ‘tis now—

   Was ever on earth here before such a sinner;

   Protesting, excusing and swearing a vow,

   She’d nothing worth eating to give us for dinner.





   Why Kitty, if starving for want of a meal,

   And had’nt a cent in the world to buy meat,

   You wouldn’t exclaim with a more pious zeal,

   “I’m dying of hunger—we’ve nothing to eat!!”



The Proof—the Queen of Fashion



   The point I advance, if it need confirmation,

   I’ll prove by a witness that few will dispute,

   A pink of perfection and truth in the naion

   Where fashion and folly are all of a suit.





   ‘Tis “Merdle the banker”—or rather his wife,

   Whose fashion, religion, or music, or dress,

   Is followed, consulted, by many through life,

   As pilots are followed by ships in distress;

   For money’s a pilot, a master, a king,

   Which men follow blindly through quicksands and shoals,

   Where pilots their ships in a moment might fling

   To destruction the vessel and cargo and souls.





   ‘Twas money made Kitty of fashion the queen,

   And fortune oft lends queens the scepter;

   So fortune and fashion with this one we’ve seen

   Her money and fortune in fashion has kept her;

   While slaves of the queen with her hoops rules the day,

   Expanding their utmost extent of expansion,

   And mandates of fashion most freely obey,

   And would if it bid all their souls to extinction.



The Object aimed at



   But what “lady patron” as queen holds the sway;

   Or sweeping, whose hoops in the street are most sweeping;

   The burthen is not of this truth-telling lay,

   That should in its reading the world set to weeping,

   While telling the suff’rings from head to the feet,

   Of poor human beings with

nothing to eat

.



What another Poet did



   Another expounder of life’s thorny mazes

   Excited our pity at fortune’s hard far