Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Probatur Aliter by Jonathan Swift
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Probatur Aliter

    By Jonathan Swift



    A long-ear'd beast, and a field-house for cattle,
    Among the coals doth often rattle.[1]

    A long-ear'd beast, a bird that prates,
    The bridegrooms' first gift to their mates,
    Is by all pious Christians thought,
    In clergymen the greatest fault.[2]

    A long-ear'd beast, and woman of Endor,
    If your wife be a scold, that will mend her.[3]

    With a long-ear'd beast, and medicine's use,
    Cooks make their fowl look tight and spruce.[4]

    A long-ear'd beast, and holy fable,
    Strengthens the shoes of half the rabble.[5]

    A long-ear'd beast, and Rhenish wine,
    Lies in the lap of ladies fine.[6]

    A long-ear'd beast, and Flanders College,
    Is Dr. T -    - l, to my knowledge.[7]

    A long-ear'd beast, and building knight,
    Censorious people do in spite.[8]

    A long-ear'd beast, and bird of night,
    We sinners art too apt to slight.[9]

    A long-ear'd beast, and shameful vermin,
    A judge will eat, though clad in ermine.[10]

    A long-ear'd beast, and Irish cart,
    Can leave a mark, and give a smart.[11]

    A long-ear'd beast, in mud to lie,
    No bird in air so swift can fly.[12]

    A long-ear'd beast, and a sputt'ring old Whig,
    I wish he were in it, and dancing a jig.[13]

    A long-ear'd beast, and liquor to write,
    Is a damnable smell both morning and night.[14]

    A long-ear'd beast, and the child of a sheep,
    At Whist they will make a desperate sweep.[15]

    A beast long-ear'd, and till midnight you stay,
    Will cover a house much better than clay.[16]

    A long-ear'd beast, and the drink you love best,
    You call him a sloven in earnest for jest.[17]

    A long-ear'd beast, and the sixteenth letter,
    I'd not look at all unless I look'd better.[18]

    A long-ear'd beast give me, and eggs unsound,
    Or else I will not ride one inch of ground.[19]

    A long-ear'd beast, another name for jeer,
    To ladies' skins there nothing comes so near.[20]

    A long-ear'd beast, and kind noise of a cat,
    Is useful in journeys, take notice of that.[21]

    A long-ear'd beast, and what seasons your beef,
    On such an occasion the law gives relief.[22]

    A long-ear'd beast, a thing that force must drive in,
    Bears up his house, that's of his own contriving.[23]



Extra Info:
[Footnote 1: A shovel.]
[Footnote 2: Aspiring.]
[Footnote 3: A switch.]
[Footnote 4: A skewer.]
[Footnote 5: A sparable; a small nail in a shoe.]
[Footnote 6: A shock.]
[Footnote 7: A sloven.]
[Footnote 8: Asperse. (Pearce was an architect, who built the
Parliament-House, Dublin.)]
[Footnote 9: A soul.]
[Footnote 10: A slice.]
[Footnote 11: A scar.]
[Footnote 12: A swallow.]
[Footnote 13: A sty.]
[Footnote 14: A sink.]
[Footnote 15: A slam.]
[Footnote 16: A slate.]
[Footnote 17: A swine.]
[Footnote 18: Askew.]
[Footnote 19: A saddle.]
[Footnote 20: A smock.]
[Footnote 21: A spur.]
[Footnote 22: Assault.]
[Footnote 23: A snail.]


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