FRANK carves very ill, yet will palm all the meats: He eats more than six, and drinks more than he eats. Four pipes after dinner he constantly smokes, And seasons his whiffs with impertinent jokes. Yet sighing, he says, we must certainly break; And my cruel unkindness compels him to speak; For of late I invite him -- but four times a week. ANOTHER. To John I owed great obligation; But John unhappily thought fit To publish it to all the nation: Sure John and I are more than quit. ANOTHER. YES, every poet is a fool: By demonstration Ned can show it; Happy, could Ned's inverted rule Prove every fool to be a poet. ANOTHER. THY nags (the leanest things alive), So very hard thou lovest to drive; I heard thy anxious coachman say, It cost thee more in whips than hay. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO CHLOE WHO FOR HIS SAKE WISHED HERSELF YOUNGER by WILLIAM CARTWRIGHT THE HUNTING OF THE SNARK: FIT 3. THE BAKER'S TALE by CHARLES LUTWIDGE DODGSON TO THE THAWING WIND by ROBERT FROST THE BRITISH CHURCH by GEORGE HERBERT LINES; SUGGESTED BY GRAVES TWO ENGLISH SOLDIERS ON CONCORD by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL |