**** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE ****

Find this Story

Print, a form you can hold

Wireless download to your Amazon Kindle

Look for a summary or analysis of this Poem.

Enjoy this? Share it!

PAGE 2

Neighbour Peter’s Mare
by [?]

SAID Peter, parson, clearly you are wise;
From learning, what advantages arise!
Is this pray sold?–If I’d much money got,
To make the purchase I’d the cash allot.

CONTINUED John:–now I will thee instruct,
The proper manner, matters to conduct,
For thee to have a clever mare by day,
And still at night a charming wife survey;
Face, legs, and ev’ry thing shall reappear;
Come, see it done, and I’ll perform it here;
Thou’lt then the method fully comprehend;
But hold thy tongue, or all will quickly end:
A single word the magick would dispel,
And, during life, no more with us ‘twould dwell.
Keep close thy mouth and merely ope’ thy eyes:
A glimpse alone to learn it will suffice;
This o’er, thyself shall practise it the same,
And all will follow as when first it came.

THE husband promised he would hold his tongue;
And John disliked deferring matters long.
Come, Magdalene, said he, you will undress;
To quit those Sunday-clothes, you’ll acquiesce,
And put yourself in Nature’s pure array
Well, well, proceed; with stays and sleeves away;
That’s better still; now petticoats lay by;
How nicely with my orders you comply.

WHEN Magdalene was to the linen come,
Some marks of shame around her senses swum;
A wife to live and die was her desire,
Much rather than be seen in Eve’s attire;
She vowed that, spite of what the priest disclosed;
She never would consent to be exposed.

SAID Peter, pretty work, upon my truth:–
Not let us see how you are made forsooth!
What silly scruples!–Are they in your creed?
You were not always led such scenes to heed:
Pray how d’ye manage when for fleas you seek?
‘Tis strange, good sir, that she should be so weak;
What can you fear?–’tis folly time to waste;
He will not eat you: come, I say, make haste:
Have done with haggling; had you acted right,
Ere now the parson all had finished quite.

ON saying this, her garment off he took;
Put on his spectacles to overlook;
And parson John, without delay, began;
Said he (as o’er her person now he ran),
This part umbilical will make the mare
A noble breast, and strength at once declare:
Then further on the pastor placed his hand,
While, with the other, (as a magick wand,)
He set about transforming mounts of snow;
That in our climes a genial warmth bestow,
And semi-globes are called, while those that rise
In t’other hemisphere, of larger size,
Are seldom mentioned, through respect no doubt,
But these howe’er the parson, quite devout,
Would not neglect, and whatsoe’er he felt,
He always named, and on its beauties dwelt;
The ceremony this, it seems, required,
And fully ev’ry movement John admired.

PROCEEDINGS so minute gave Peter pain,
And as he could not see the rector gain
The slightest change, he prayed the pow’rs divine,
To give assistance to the priest’s design;
But this was vain, since all the magick spell,
In metamorphosing the lady well,
Depended on the fixing of the tail;
Without this ornament the whole would fail.

To set it on the parson hastened now,
When Neighbour Peter ‘gan to knit his brow,
And bawled so loud, you might have heard him far:
No tail, said he, I’ll have: there’ll be a scar;
You put it on too low; but vain his cries,
The husband’s diligence would not suffice,
For, spite of ev’ry effort, much was done,
And John completely his career had run,
If Peter had not pulled the rector’s gown,
Who hastily replied, thou ninny, clown;
Did I not tell thee silence to observe,
And not a footstep from thy station swerve?
The whole is spoiled, insufferable elf!
And for it thou hast got to thank thyself.

THE husband, while the holy pastor spoke,
Appeared to grumble and his stars invoke.
The wife was in a rage, and ‘gan to scold:
Said she to Peter, wretch that I behold!
Thou’lt be through life a prey to pain and grief,
Come not to me and bray and hope relief,
The worthy pastor would have us procured
The means that might much comfort have ensured.
Can he deserve such treatment to receive?
Good Mister John this goose I now would leave,
And ev’ry morning, while he gathers fruits,
Or plants, herbs, cabbages, and various roots,
Without averting him, pray, here repair,
You’ll soon transform me to a charming mare.

No mare, replied the husband, I desire;
An ass for me is all that I require.