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The three tours of Doctor Syntax

In search of 1. The picturesque, 2. Of consolation, 3. Of a wife. The text complete. [By William Combe] With four illustrations

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Dick Razor.—
“While I the razor can prepare,
Or give new fashion to the hair;
While I can smooth the bristly chin, Nor ever wound the tender skin;
While I the Pleader's head prepare In all the dignity of hair;
To make, as he lays down the laws, The worse appear the better cause:
Ne'er shall I from my mem'ry drive
The strange events by which men thrive,

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Nor e'er forget these imps of prey,
Or Lawyers who are worse than they.”
Thus Dick unto his home departed,
With cash in hand and merry-hearted.
Syntax with the meridian sun Had his day's journey now begun:
When as the Landlord scratch'd his pate,
And humbly bow'd beside the gate,
Says Pat, “my friend as I am starting,
I'll give you a kind word at parting.
There was a man in former time, But in what age or in what clime
I cannot say, a sportsman he, A perfect hunting prodigy,
Who, as he beat about his grounds,
Was chas'd and eat up by his hounds:
If you would, therefore, save your skin, And all the flesh it buckles in,
Look, that you keep a guard of cats, Or you'll be eat up by your rats.”