Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Jonathan Swift > Text of Bouts Rimez On Signora Domitilla
A poem by Jonathan Swift |
||
Bouts Rimez On Signora Domitilla |
||
________________________________________________
Title: Bouts Rimez On Signora Domitilla Author: Jonathan Swift [More Titles by Swift] Bouts Rimez[1] On Signora Domitilla Let nobles toast, in bright champaign, At Goodman's Fields I've much admired Virgil has eternized in song Great Theodose condemn'd a town Wheeler,[5] Sir George, in travels wise, Not all the wealth of plunder'd Italy, Five years a nymph at certain hamlet, Dan Pope consigns Belinda's watch
[Footnote 1: Verses to be made upon a given name or word, at the end of a line, and to which rhymes must be found.--_W. E. B._] [Footnote 2: Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne, famous, _inter alia_, for his enthusiasm in urging the use of tar-water for all kinds of complaints. See his Works, _edit._ Fraser. Fielding mentions it favourably as a remedy for dropsy, in the Introduction to his "Journal of a voyage to Lisbon"; and see Austin Dobson's note to his edition of the "Journal."--_W. E. B._] [Footnote 3: "Aeneid," xi.] [Footnote 4: Qu. Flaccilla? see Gibbon, iii, chap, xxvii.--_W. E. B._] [Footnote 5: Who lived from 1650 to 1723, and wrote and published several books of travels in Greece and Italy, etc.--_W. E. B._] [Footnote 6: See "The Rape of the Lock."] [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |