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pay Tens upon tens for loads of hay.' 'With all my heart, and soon,' says I, And feeling for the change thereby; But all my shillings com'd to five-- Says he, 'No matter, man alive! There's something in your honest phiz I'd trust, if twice the sum it is;-- You'll pay next time you come to town.' 'As sure,' says I, 'as corn is brown.' 'All right,' says he.--Thinks I 'huzza! He's got no bargain of the hay!' "Well, home I goes, with empty cart, Whipping the horses pretty smart, And whistling ev'ry yard o' way, To think how well I'd sold the hay-- And just cotch'd Master at his greens And bacon, or it might be beans, Which didn't taste the worse sure_ly_, To hear his hay had gone so high. But lord! when I laid down the note, It stuck the victuals in his throat, And chok'd him till his face all grew Like pickling-cabbage, red and blue; With such big goggle eyes, Ods nails! They seem'd a-coming out like snails! 'A note,' says he, half mad with passion, 'Why, thou dom'd fool! thou'st took a flash 'un!' Now, wasn't that a pretty mess? That's Hagricultural Distress." COLIN. "Phoo! phoo! You're nothing near the thing! You only argy in a ring; 'Cause why? You never cares to look, Like me, in any larned book; But schollards know the wrong and right Of every thing in black and white. "Well, Farming, that's its common name, And Agriculture be the same: So put your Farming first, and next Distress, and there you have your text. But here the question comes to press, What farming be, and what's distress? Why, farming is to plough and sow, Weed, harrow, harvest, reap, and mow, Thrash, winnow, sell,--and buy and breed The proper stock to fat and feed. Distress is want, and pain, and grief, And sickness,--things as wants relief; Thirst, hunger, age, and cold severe; In short, ax any overseer,-- Well, now, the logic for to chop, Where's the distress about a crop?" "There's no distress in keeping sheep, I likes to see 'em frisk and leap; There's no distress in seeing swine Grow up to pork and bacon fine; There's no distress in growing wheat And grass for men or beasts to eat; And making of lean cattle fat, There's no distress, of course, in that. Then what remains?--But one thing more, And that's the _Farming of the Poor_!" HODGE, DICKON, GILES, HOB, AND SIMON. "Yea!--aye!--sure_ly_!--for sartin!--yes!-- _That's_ Hagricultural Distress!" DOMESTIC POEMS. "It's hame, hame, hame."--A.
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