Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Verses Left With A Silver Standish On The Dean Of St. Patrick's Desk, On His Birth-Day. By Dr. Delany by Jonathan Swift
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Verses Left With A Silver Standish On The Dean Of St. Patrick's Desk, On His Birth-Day. By Dr. Delany

    By Jonathan Swift



    Hither from Mexico I came,
    To serve a proud Iernian dame:
    Was long submitted to her will;
    At length she lost me at quadrille.
    Through various shapes I often pass'd,
    Still hoping to have rest at last;
    And still ambitious to obtain
    Admittance to the patriot Dean;
    And sometimes got within his door,
    But soon turn'd out to serve the poor:[1]
    Not strolling Idleness to aid,
    But honest Industry decay'd.
    At length an artist purchased me,
    And wrought me to the shape you see.
        This done, to Hermes I applied:
    "O Hermes! gratify my pride;
    Be it my fate to serve a sage,
    The greatest genius of his age;
    That matchless pen let me supply,
    Whose living lines will never die!"
        "I grant your suit," the God replied,
    And here he left me to reside.



Extra Info:
[Footnote 1: Alluding to sums lent by the Dean, without interest, to assist poor tradesmen.]



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