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s surprising, How much he eats, how much he swills. His brace of puppies how they stuff! And they must have three meals a-day, Yet never think they get enough; His horses too eat all our hay. O! if I could, how I would maul His tallow face and wainscot paws, His beetle brows, and eyes of wall, And make him soon give up the cause! Must I be every moment chid With [2] _Skinnybonia, Snipe_, and _Lean?_ O! that I could but once be rid Of this insulting tyrant Dean! [Footnote 1: The seat of Acheson Moore, Esq., in the county of Tyrone.] [Footnote 2: The Dean used to call Lady Acheson by those names. See "My Lady's Lamentation," next page.--_W. E. B._] ON A VERY OLD GLASS AT MARKET-HILL Frail glass! thou mortal art as well as I; Though none can tell which of us first shall die. ANSWERED EXTEMPORE BY DR. SWIFT We both are mortal; but thou, frailer creature, May'st die, like me, by chance, but not by nature. EPITAPH IN BERKELEY CHURCH-YARD, GLOUCESTERSHIRE Here lies the Earl of Suffolk's fool, Men call'd him Dicky Pearce; His folly served to make folks laugh, When wit and mirth were scarce. Poor Dick, alas! is dead and gone, What signifies to cry? Dickies enough are still behind, To laugh at by and by. Buried, June 18, 1728, aged 63. MY LADY'S[1] LAMENTATION AND COMPLAINT AGAINST THE DEAN JULY 28, 1728 Sure never did man see A wretch like poor Nancy, So teazed day and night By a Dean and a Knight. To punish my sins, Sir Arthur begins, And gives me a wipe, With Skinny and Snipe:[2], His malice is plain, Hallooing the Dean. The Dean never stops, When he opens his chops; I'm quite overrun With rebus and pun. Before he came here, To spunge for good cheer, I sat with delight, From morning till night, With two bony thumbs Could rub my old gums, Or scratching my nose And jogging my toes; But at present, forsooth, I must not rub a tooth. When my elbows he sees Held up by my knees, My arms, like two props, Supporting my chops, And just as I handle 'em Moving all like a pendulum; He trips up my props, And down my chin drops From my head to my heels, Like a clock without wheels; I sink in the spleen, A useless machine. If he had his will, I should never sit still: He comes with his whims I must move my limbs; I cannot be sweet Without using my feet; To lengthen my breath, He tires me to death. By the worst of a
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