Public Domain Poetry And Stories - An Echo by Jonathan Swift
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An Echo

    By Jonathan Swift



    Never sleeping, still awake,
    Pleasing most when most I speak;
    The delight of old and young,
    Though I speak without a tongue.
    Nought but one thing can confound me,
    Many voices joining round me;
    Then I fret, and rave, and gabble,
    Like the labourers of Babel.
    Now I am a dog, or cow,
    I can bark, or I can low;
    I can bleat, or I can sing,
    Like the warblers of the spring.
    Let the lovesick bard complain,
    And I mourn the cruel pain;
    Let the happy swain rejoice,
    And I join my helping voice:
    Both are welcome, grief or joy,
    I with either sport and toy.
    Though a lady, I am stout,
    Drums and trumpets bring me out:
    Then I clash, and roar, and rattle,
    Join in all the din of battle.
    Jove, with all his loudest thunder,
    When I'm vext, can't keep me under;
    Yet so tender is my ear,
    That the lowest voice I fear;
    Much I dread the courtier's fate,
    When his merit's out of date,
    For I hate a silent breath,
    And a whisper is my death.



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