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Occasions Off-spring

Or Poems upon Severall Occasions: By Mathew Stevenson
 

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A. B. to his shoemaker.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


74

A. B. to his shoemaker.

Sirra looke to't I shall reduce your pride;
Rip up your roguarie and tew your hide.
My weather long shall apt a time for th' nonce
To streatch the latchets of your logger sconce.
You were too high ith' instep, I'm afraid,
Your loftinesse will soone be underlaid;
Crispine coucht in a shoemakers disguise,
Cause none so base to cheat inquiring eyes.
Yet to fit mee should Crispin come to doe't,
Crispine, by Jove hee came but to my foot.
And dost thou wretch to reach this head of mine,
Muster thy brussels as the Porcupine
Her quills' presumptious trash, I could afford,
To send the challenge to the cutting board;
New vampe your manners, & more modish bee,
Least Peter streatch you on a crosse graind tree:
Where being once set up, tis ten to one,
You'l find it harder to come off, then one:
Villian avant, henceforth nere looke to have
The lengh of my foot, since y'have plaid the knave.
Noe noe, I view your bill and there I see,
The very place where my shoe pinches mee;
But make your market pray of what is past,
Fellow beleve't of me y've had y'our last:
And that the world may see in every line,
I fitt thy foot, as thou hast fitted mine.
Thus I in fine translate thee, goe, extend
Thy base spun thread, to make a Coblers end.