TWELVE ARTICLES.
51
VII. | Not a jest or humourous story | |
Will I ever tell before ye: | ||
To be chidden for explaining, | ||
When you quite mistake the meaning. | ||
VIII. | Never more will I suppose, | |
You can taste my verse or prose. | ||
IX. | You no more at me shall fret. | |
While I teach, and you forget. | ||
X. | You shall never hear me thunder, | |
When you blunder on, and blunder. | ||
XI. | Show your poverty of spirit, | |
And in dress place all your merit; | ||
Give yourself ten thousand airs; | ||
That with me shall break no squares. | ||
XII. | Never will I give advice, | |
Till you please to ask me thrice: | ||
Which if you in scorn reject, | ||
'Twill be just as I expect. |
Thus we both shall have our ends,
And continue special friends.
THE REVOLUTION AT MARKET-HILL. 1730.
FROM distant regions Fortune sends
An odd triumvirate of friends;
Where Phœbus pays a scanty stipend,
Where never yet a codling ripen'd:
E 2
Hither