Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Love Poem From A Physician To His Mistress by Jonathan Swift
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A Love Poem From A Physician To His Mistress

    By Jonathan Swift



    WRITTEN AT LONDON


    By poets we are well assured
    That love, alas! can ne'er be cured;
    A complicated heap of ills,
    Despising boluses and pills.
    Ah! Chloe, this I find is true,
    Since first I gave my heart to you.
    Now, by your cruelty hard bound,
    I strain my guts, my colon wound.
    Now jealousy my grumbling tripes
    Assaults with grating, grinding gripes.
    When pity in those eyes I view,
    My bowels wambling make me spew.
    When I an amorous kiss design'd,
    I belch'd a hurricane of wind.
    Once you a gentle sigh let fall;
    Remember how I suck'd it all;
    What colic pangs from thence I felt,
    Had you but known, your heart would melt,
    Like ruffling winds in cavern pent,
    Till Nature pointed out a vent.
    How have you torn my heart to pieces
    With maggots, humours, and caprices!
    By which I got the hemorrhoids;
    And loathsome worms my anus voids.
    Whene'er I hear a rival named,
    I feel my body all inflamed;
    Which, breaking out in boils and blains,
    With yellow filth my linen stains;
    Or, parch'd with unextinguish'd thirst,
    Small-beer I guzzle till I burst;
    And then I drag a bloated corpus,
    Swell'd with a dropsy, like a porpus;
    When, if I cannot purge or stale,
    I must be tapp'd to fill a pail.



Extra Info:
[Footnote 1: The Dean of St. Paul's, father to the Bishop. - H.]



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