Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The Worlds Best Poetry. Volume IX. Tragedy: Humor. 1904. | | | | Humorous Poems: II. Miscellaneous | | Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog | | Oliver Goldsmith (17301774) |
| | | GOOD people all, of every sort, | |
| Give ear unto my song; | |
| And if you find it wondrous short, | |
| It cannot hold you long. | |
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| In Islington there was a man | 5 |
| Of whom the world might say, | |
| That still a godly race he ran | |
| Wheneer he went to pray. | |
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| A kind and gentle heart he had, | |
| To comfort friends and foes: | 10 |
| The naked every day he clad | |
| When he put on his clothes. | |
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| And in that town a dog was found, | |
| As many dogs there be, | |
| Both mongrel, puppy, whelp, and hound, | 15 |
| And curs of low degree. | |
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| This dog and man at first were friends; | |
| But when a pique began, | |
| The dog to gain his private ends, | |
| Went mad, and bit the man. | 20 |
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| Around from all the neighboring streets | |
| The wondering neighbors ran, | |
| And swore the dog had lost his wits, | |
| To bite so good a man! | |
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| The wound it seemed both sore and sad | 25 |
| To every Christian eye: | |
| And while they swore the dog was mad, | |
| They swore the man would die. | |
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| But soon a wonder came to light, | |
| That showed the rogues they lied: | 30 |
| The man recovered of the bite, | |
| The dog it was that died! | | | | |
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