Oysters
Jonathan Swift
Charming oysters I cry: My masters, come buy, So plump and so fresh, So sweet is their flesh, No Colchester oyster Is sweeter and moister: Your stomach they settle, And rouse up your mettle: They'll make you a dad Of a lass or a lad; And madam your wife They'll please to the life; Be she barren, be she old, Be she slut, or be she scold, Eat my oysters, and lie near her, She'll be fruitful, never fear her.
Next 10 Poems
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- Jonathan Swift : The Beasts' Confession
- Jonathan Swift : The Lady's Dressing Room
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- Jonathan Swift : The Progress Of Poetry
- Jonathan Swift : The Sick Lion And The Ass
- Jonathan Swift : To Quilca, A Country House Not In Good Repair
- Jonathan Swift : To Stella, Who Collected And Transcribed His Poems
Previous 10 Poems
- Jonathan Swift : On The World
- Jonathan Swift : On Stephen Duck, The Thresher, And Favourite Poet. A Quibbl
- Jonathan Swift : On Stella's Birthday, 1727
- Jonathan Swift : On Stella's Birthday, 1719
- Jonathan Swift : On Stella's Birth-day 1719
- Jonathan Swift : On Himself
- Jonathan Swift : On An Ill-managed House
- Jonathan Swift : Mrs Frances Haris's Petition
- Jonathan Swift : Market Women's Cries
- Jonathan Swift : Elegy Upon Tiger