Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Verses Made For Fruit-Women by Jonathan Swift
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Verses Made For Fruit-Women

    By Jonathan Swift



    APPLES

    Come buy my fine wares,
    Plums, apples, and pears.
    A hundred a penny,
    In conscience too many:
    Come, will you have any?
    My children are seven,
    I wish them in Heaven;
    My husband a sot,
    With his pipe and his pot,
    Not a farthing will gain them,
    And I must maintain them.



    ASPARAGUS

        Ripe 'sparagrass
        Fit for lad or lass,
    To make their water pass:
        O, 'tis pretty picking
        With a tender chicken!



    ONIONS


            Come, follow me by the smell,
            Here are delicate onions to sell;
            I promise to use you well.
            They make the blood warmer,
            You'll feed like a farmer;
    For this is every cook's opinion,
    No savoury dish without an onion;
    But, lest your kissing should be spoil'd,
    Your onions must be thoroughly boil'd:
            Or else you may spare
            Your mistress a share,
    The secret will never be known:
            She cannot discover
            The breath of her lover,
    But think it as sweet as her own.



    OYSTERS

            Charming oysters I cry:
            My masters, come buy,
            So plump and so fresh,
            So sweet is their flesh,
            No Colchester oyster
            Is sweeter and moister:
            Your stomach they settle,
            And rouse up your mettle:
            They'll make you a dad
            Of a lass or a lad;
            And madam your wife
            They'll please to the life;
        Be she barren, be she old,
        Be she slut, or be she scold,
    Eat my oysters, and lie near her,
    She'll be fruitful, never fear her.



    HERRINGS

                Be not sparing,
                Leave off swearing.
                Buy my herring
    Fresh from Malahide,[1]
    Better never was tried.
    Come, eat them with pure fresh butter and mustard,
    Their bellies are soft, and as white as a custard.
    Come, sixpence a-dozen, to get me some bread,
    Or, like my own herrings, I soon shall be dead.



Extra Info:
[Footnote 1: Malahide, a village five miles from Dublin, famous for oysters. - F.]



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