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Jonathan Swift - On The PosteriorsJonathan Swift - On The Posteriors
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Because I am by nature blind, I wisely choose to walk behind; However, to avoid disgrace, I let no creature see my face. My words are few, but spoke with sense; And yet my speaking gives offence: Or, if to whisper I presume, The company will fly the room. By all the world I am opprest: And my oppression gives them rest.   Through me, though sore against my will, Instructors every art instil. By thousands I am sold and bought, Who neither get nor lose a groat; For none, alas! by me can gain, But those who give me greatest pain. Shall man presume to be my master, Who`s but my caterer and taster? Yet, though I always have my will, I`m but a mere depender still: An humble hanger-on at best; Of whom all people make a jest.   In me detractors seek to find Two vices of a different kind; I`m too profuse, some censurers cry, And all I get, I let it fly; While others give me many a curse, Because too close I hold my purse. But this I know, in either case, They dare not charge me to my face. `Tis true, indeed, sometimes I save, Sometimes run out of all I have; But, when the year is at an end, Computing what I get and spend, My goings-out, and comings-in, I cannot find I lose or win; And therefore all that know me say, I justly keep the middle way. I`m always by my betters led; I last get up, and first a-bed; Though, if I rise before my time, The learn`d in sciences sublime Consult the stars, and thence foretell Good luck to those with whom I dwell.
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