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Lines Written En Badinage, After Visiting A Paper-Mill Near Tunbridge-Wells, In Consequence Of The Lovely Miss W ---- , Who Excels In Drawing, Requesting The Author To Describe The Process Of Making Paper, In Verse.

Topics: classic

Reader! I do not wish to brag;     But, to display Eliza's skill,     I'd proudly be the vilest rag     That ever went to paper-mill.     Content in pieces to be cut;     Tho' sultry were the summer-skies,     Pleas'd between flannel I'd be put,     And after bath'd in jellied size.     Tho' to be squeez'd and hang'd I hate,     For thee, sweet girl! upon my word,     When the stout press had forc'd me flat,     I'd be suspended on a cord.     And then, when dried and fit for use,     Eliza! I would pray to thee,     If with thy pen thou would'st amuse,     That thou would'st deign to write on me.     Gad's bud! how pleasant it would prove     Her pretty chit-chat to convey,     P'rhaps be the record of her love,     Told in some coy enchanting way.     Or, if her pencil she would try,     On me, oh! may she still imprint     Those forms that fix th' admiring eye,     Each graceful line, each glowing tint!     Then shall I reason have to brag,     For thus, to high importance grown,     The world will see a simple rag     Become a treasure rarely known.

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"Reader! I do not wish to brag;..."

John Carr (Sir)'s contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Lines Written En Badinage, After Visiting A Paper-Mill Near Tunbridge-Wells, In Consequence Of The Lovely Miss W ---- , Who Excels In Drawing, Requesting The Author To Describe The Process Of Making Paper, In Verse."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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