Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 7.djvu/169

 But, above all, I prefer Æschylus, Whose moving touches, when they please kill us. And now I find my Muse but ill able, To hold out longer in trissyllable. I chose those rhymes out for their difficulty; Will you return as hard ones if I call t' ye?

DR. SHERIDAN TO DR. SWIFT. 1719.

EAR Dean, since in cruxes and puns you and I deal, Pray why is a woman a sieve and a riddle? 'Tis a thought that came into my noddle this morning, In bed as I lay, Sir, a tossing and turning. You'll find, if you read but a few of your histories, All women, as Eve, all women are mysteries. To find out this riddle I know you'll be eager, And make every one of the sex a Belphegor. But that will not do, for I mean to commend them: I swear without jest I an honour intend them. In a sieve, sir, their ancient extraction I quite tell, In a riddle I give you their power and their title. This I told you before: do you know what I mean, sir? "Not I, by my troth, sir." — Then read it again, sir. The reason I send you these lines of rhymes double Is purely through pity, to save you the trouble Of thinking two hours for a rhyme as you did last, When your Pegasus canter'd in triple, and rid fast. As for my little nag, which I keep at Parnassus, With Phœbus's leave, to run with his asses, He goes slow and sure, and he never is jaded, While your fiery steed is whipp'd, spurr'd, bastinaded. THE