Page:Fugitive Poetry 1600-1878.djvu/462
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
444
JOE WOOD.
When farmers' wives and daughters fairSet up with silks and Leghorns rare, To look most wondrous winning;They set upon a slippery stand,Till indigence, with iron hand, Upsets their underpinning.
Some city ladies, too, whose gearHas made them to their husbands dear, Set up to lead the ton;Though they sit high on fashion's seat,Age, death, or poverty, albeit Will set them down anon.
Some fools set up to live by law,And though they are "all over jaw," Soon fail for lack of brains:But had the boobies only justKnown where they ought to sit at first, They'd saved a world of pains.
A quack sets up the doctor's trade,But could he use the sexton's spade No better than his pills,The man might toil from morn to night,And find his match with all his might To bury half he kills.
You may set up for what you chooseAs easily as wear old shoes, If e'er so low at present;But when you have set up in vain,And find you must sit down again, 'Tis terribly unpleasant.
Joe Wood.
Joe Wood he was a carpenter, A straight-edged man of rules;A cold once seized upon his chest, And a thief upon his tools.
He called his wife in through the panes, And, though much pained, he kissed her;She placed a blister to his chest, And for her pains he blessed her.