Dirty_father_Thames.jpg


Summary

Description
English: Dirty father Thames : Father Thames shown as a filthy looking vagrant, and the river as a repository of filth and industrial waste. A poem bemoans the state of this waterway.
Français : Sale père Tamise : le père Tamise est montré comme un vagabond nauséabond, et la rivière comme un dépôt d'ordures. Le poème décrit l'état de la rivière.

Poem :

Filthy river, filthy river,
Foul from London to the Nore,
What art thou but one vast gutter,
One tremendous common shore?

All beside thy sludgy waters,
All beside thy reeking ooze,
Christian folks inhale mephitis,
Which thy bubbly bosom brews.

All her foul abominations
Into thee the City throws;
These pollutions, ever churning,
To and fro thy current flows.

And from thee is brewed our porter -
Thee, thou gully, puddle, sink!
Thou, vile cesspool, art the liquor
Whence is made the beer we drink!

Thou too hast a conservator,
He who fills the civic chair;
Well does he conserve thee, truly,
Does he not, my good Lord Mayor?

Date
Source Original : Cartoon from Punch Magazine , Volume 15 Page 152; 7 October 1848
This copy : Punch archives
Author Punch Magazine

Licensing

Public domain
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office ) before January 1, 1929.

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Note: This tag should not be used for sound recordings. PD-1923 Public domain in the United States //commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dirty_father_Thames.jpg

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7 October 1848 Gregorian