Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 7.djvu/399

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A PASTORAL DIALOGUE.
387

SHEELAH.

My love for gentle Dermot faster grows,
Than yon tall dock that rises to thy nose.
Cut down the dock, 'twill sprout again; but, O!
Love rooted out, again will never grow.


DERMOT.

No more that brier thy tender leg shall rake:
(I spare the thistles for sir Arthur's[1] sake)
Sharp are the stones; take thou this rushy mat;
The hardest bum will bruise with sitting squat.


SHEELAH.

Thy breeches, torn behind, stand gaping wide;
This petticoat shall save thy dear backside;
Nor need I blush; although you feel it wet,
Dermot, I vow, 'tis nothing else but sweat.


DERMOT.

At an old stubborn root I chanc'd to tug,
When the dean threw me this tobacco-plug:
A longer ha'p'orth[2] never did I see;
This, dearest Sheelah, thou shalt share with me.


SHEELAH.

In at the pantry door this morn I slipt,
And from the shelf a charming crust I whipt:
Dennis[3] was out, and I got hither safe;
And thou, my dear, shalt have the bigger half.


DERMOT.

When you saw Tady at long bullets play,
You sate and lous'd him all a sunshine day:

  1. Who was a great lover of Scotland.
  2. Halfpennyworth.
  3. Sir Arthur's butler.
C C 2
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