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Home  »  A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895  »  A Ballade of Playing Cards

Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895. 1895.

Gleeson White b. 185–

A Ballade of Playing Cards

TO soothe a mad King’s fevered brain

(So runs the legend), cards were made,

When Gringonneur for Charles insane

“Diversely colored” heart and spade,

Diamond and club, the painted jade,

The light-heeled Jack, and beckoning

Called, to their royal cousin’s aid,

Puppets of knave, and queen, and king.

Grim fancy! that the playful train,

The quaint, grimacing cavalcade,

Should wreck such ills where they obtain

The victims to their sorry trade,

The player cozened by the played;

Pasteboards supreme; to this they bring

Both gallant buck and roystering blade,

Puppets of knave, and queen, and king.

From reckless play, what noble gain?

One friend hard hit, the rest afraid

To show their pleasure at his pain,

Such sympathy might well persuade

The cards in garish heaps displayed

To join, with impish revelling,

And jeer as all his fortunes fade—

Puppets of knave, and queen, and king.

L’ENVOI

Prince! after all, they are the shade,

The type of every earthly thing,

And we, through all life’s masquerade,

Puppets of knave, and queen, and king.