Page:Pleasant history of Poor Robin, the merry sadler of Walden.pdf/23

23 head of a stag, the bag of a nag, the  of a hog, skip up and down like a, and fawn like a, dog. As also the ingredients whereof a woman's tongue  made, viz. The sound of a great bell, wagging of a dog's tail, the shaking  an aspen leaf tempered with running.

When Poor Robin had gotten a cup in crown, as it oftentimes happen'd, he ould be then playing the poet, and  but rhymes could then come out  his mouth; for as one writes,

Poet and pot doth differ but one letter,

And that makes poets love the pot the better.

Amongst other of his conceits, this comparison was much used by him.

a purse that hath no chink in't;

Or a cellar and no drink in't,

a jewel never worn,

Or a child untimely born,

a song without a foot,

Or a bond and no hand to't,

doth she seem unto mine eyes,

lives a virgin till she dies.

money doth entice the purse,

drink in the cellar quencheth thirst;