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				Title:     On A Horn 
			    Author: Jonathan Swift [More Titles by Swift ]		                
			     The joy of man, the pride of brutes,Domestic subject for disputes,
 Of plenty thou the emblem fair,
 Adorn'd by nymphs with all their care!
 I saw thee raised to high renown,
 Supporting half the British crown;
 And often have I seen thee grace
 The chaste Diana's infant face;
 And whensoe'er you please to shine,
 Less useful is her light than thine:
 Thy numerous fingers know their way,
 And oft in Celia's tresses play.
 To place thee in another view,
 I'll show the world strange things and true;
 What lords and dames of high degree
 May justly claim their birth from thee!
 The soul of man with spleen you vex;
 Of spleen you cure the female sex.
 Thee for a gift the courtier sends
 With pleasure to his special friends:
 He gives, and with a generous pride,
 Contrives all means the gift to hide:
 Nor oft can the receiver know,
 Whether he has the gift or no.
 On airy wings you take your flight,
 And fly unseen both day and night;
 Conceal your form with various tricks;
 And few know how or where you fix:
 Yet some, who ne'er bestow'd thee, boast
 That they to others give thee most.
 Meantime, the wise a question start,
 If thou a real being art;
 Or but a creature of the brain,
 That gives imaginary pain?
 But the sly giver better knows thee;
 Who feels true joys when he bestows thee.
 
 
 
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