Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 7.djvu/332

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320
SWIFT'S POEMS.

The soldier is ruin'd, poor man! by his pay;
His fivepence will prove but a farthing a day,
For meat, or for drink; or he must run away.

Which, &c.


When he pulls out his twopence, the tapster says not,
That ten times as much he must pay for his shot;
And thus the poor soldier must soon go to pot.

Which, &c.


If he goes to the baker, the baker will huff,
And twentypence have for a twopenny loaf,
Then, dog, rogue, and rascal, and so kick and cuff.

Which, &c.


Again, to the market whenever he goes,
The butcher and soldier must be mortal foes,
One cuts off an ear, and the other a nose.

Which, &c.


The butcher is stout, and he values no swagger;
A cleaver 's a match any time for a dagger,
And a blue sleeve may give such a cuff as may stagger.

Which, &c.


The, beggars themselves will be broke in a trice,
When thus their poor farthings are sunk in their price;
When nothing is left, they must live on their lice.

Which, &c.


The squire possessed of twelve thousand a year,
O Lord! what a mountain his rents would appear!
Should he take them, he would not have houseroom, I fear.

Which, &c.


Though