Gin-Twist Poem

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Maginn, W.
 
Maginn, W.
  
<nowiki>A Twist-imony in favour of Gin-twist.  
+
A Twist-imony in favour of Gin-twist.  
1  At one in the morn, as I went staggering home,
+
2  With nothing at all in my hand but my fist,
+
3  At the end of the street a good youth I did meet,
+
4  Who asked me to join in a jug of gin-twist.
+
5  “Though 'tis late,” I replied, “and I'm muggy beside,
+
6  Yet an offer like this I could never resist;
+
7  So let's waddle away, sans a moment's delay,
+
8  And in style we'll demolish your jug of gin-twist.”
+
9  The friends of the grape may boast of rich Cape,
+
10  Hock, Claret, Madeira, or Lachryma Christ,
+
11  But this muzzle of mine was never so fine
+
12  As to value them more than a jug of gin-twist.
+
13  The people of Nantz, in the kingdom of France,
+
14  Bright brandy they brew, liquor not to be hissed;
+
15  It may do as a dram, but 'tis not worth a damn,
+
16  When watered, compared with a jug of gin-twist.
+
17  Antigua, Jamaica, they certainly make a
+
18  Grand species of rum, which should ne'er be dismissed;
+
19  It is splendid as grog, but never, you dog,
+
20  Esteem it as punch, like a jug of gin-twist.
+
21  Ye bailies of Glasgow! Wise men of the West!
+
22  Without your rum bowls you'd look certainly tristes;
+
23  Yet I laugh when I'm told that liquor so cold
+
24  Is as good as a foaming hot jug of gin-twist.
+
25  The bog-trotting Teagues in clear whisky delight,
+
26  Preferring potsheen to all drinks that exist;
+
27  I grieve, ne'ertheless, that it does not possess
+
28  The juniper smack of a jug of gin-twist.
+
29  Farintosh and Glenlivet, I hear, are the boast
+
30  Of those breechesless heroes, the Sons of the Mist;
+
31  But may I go choke if that villainous smoke
+
32  I'd name in a day with a jug of gin-twist.
+
33  Yet the Celtic I love, and should join them, by Jove!
+
34  Though Glengarry should vow I'd no right to enlist;
+
35  For that chief, do you see, I'd not care a bawbee,
+
36  If strongly entrenched o'er a jug of gin-twist.
+
37  One rule they lay down is the reason, I own,
+
38  Why from joining their plaided array I desist;
+
39  Because they declare that no one shall wear
+
40  Of breeches a pair, o'er their jugs of gin-twist.
+
41  This is plainly absurd, I give you my word,
+
42  Of this bare-rumped reg'lation I ne'er saw the gist;
+
43  In my gay corduroys, can't these philabeg boys
+
44  Suffer me to get drunk o'er my jug of gin-twist?
+
45  In India they smack a liquor called rack,
+
46  Which I never quaffed (at least that I wist);
+
47  I'm told 'tis like tow in its taste, and, if so,
+
48  Very different stuff from a jug of gin-twist.
+
49  As for porter and ale—'fore Gad, I turn pale,
+
50  When people on such things as these can insist;
+
51  They may do for dull clods, but, by all of the gods!
+
52  They are hog-wash when matched with a jug of gin-twist.
+
53  Why tea we import I could never conceive;
+
54  To the Mandarin folk, to be sure, it brings grist;
+
55  But in our western soils the spirits it spoils,
+
56  While to heaven they are raised by a jug of gin-twist.
+
57  Look at Hazlitt and Hunt, most unfortunate pair!
+
58  Black and blue from the kicks of a stern satirist;
+
59  But would Mynheer Izzard once trouble their gizzard,
+
60  If bohea they exchanged for a jug of gin-twist?
+
61  Leibnitz held that this earth was the first of all worlds,
+
62  And no wonder the buck was a firm optimist;
+
63  For 'twas always his use, as a proof to adduce
+
64  Of the truth of his doctrine, a jug of gin-twist.
+
65  It cures all the vapours and mulligrub capers;
+
66  It makes you like Howard, the philanthro-pist;
+
67  Woe, trouble, and pain, that bother your brain,
+
68  Are banished out clean by a jug of gin-twist.
+
69  You turn up your nose at all of your foes,
+
70  Abuse you, traduce you, they may if they list;
+
71  The lawyers, I'm sure, would look very poor,
+
72  If their clients would stick to their jugs of gin-twist.
+
73  There's Leslie, my friend, who went ramstam to law
+
74  Because Petre had styled him a poor Hebraist;
+
75  And you see how the jury, in spite of his fury,
+
76  Gave him comfort far less than one jug of gin-twist.
+
77  And therefore, I guess, sir, the celebre Professor,
+
78  Even though culpably quizzed as a mere sciolist,
+
79  Would have found it much meeter to have laughed at old Petre,
+
80  And got drunk with Kit North o'er a jug of gin-twist.
+
81  Its medical virtues a jug of gin-twist.
+
82  By its magical aid a toper is made,
+
83  Like Brockden Brown's hero, a ventriloquist;
+
84  For my belly cries out, with an audible shout,
+
85  “Fill up every chink with a jug of gin-twist.”
+
86  Geologers all, great, middling, and small,
+
87  Whether fiery Plutonian or wet Neptunist,
+
88  Most gladly, it seems, seek proofs for their schemes
+
89  In the water, or spirit, of a jug of gin-twist.
+
90  These grubbers of ground (whom God may confound!),
+
91  Forgetting transition, trap, hornblende, or schist,
+
92  And all other sorts, think only of quartz—
+
93  I mean, of the quarts in a jug of gin-twist.
+
94  Though two dozen of verse I've contrived to rehearse,
+
95  Yet still I can sing like a true melodist;
+
96  For they are but asses who think that Parnassus
+
97  In spirit surpasses a jug of gin-twist.
+
98  It makes you to speak Dutch, Latin, or Greek;
+
99  Even learning Chinese very much 'twould assist:
+
100  I'll discourse you in Hebrew, provided that ye brew
+
101  A most Massorethical jug of gin-twist.
+
102  When its amiable stream, all enveloped in steam,
+
103  Is dashed to and fro by a vigorous wrist,
+
104  How sweet a cascade every moment is made
+
105  By the artist who fashions a jug of gin-twist!
+
106  Sweet stream! There is none but delights in thy flow,
+
107  Save that vagabond villain, the Whig atheist;
+
108  For done was the job for his patron, Sir Bob,
+
109  When he dared to wage war 'gainst a jug of gin-twist.
+
110  Don't think by its name, from Geneva it came,
+
111  The sour little source of the Kirk Calvinist—
+
112  A fig for Jack Calvin! My processes alvine
+
113  Are much more rejoiced by a jug of gin-twist.
+
114  Let the Scotsman delight in malice and spite,
+
115  The black-legs at Brooks's in hazard or whist;
+
116  Tom Dibdin in books, Micky Taylor in cooks:
+
117  My pleasure is fixed in a jug of gin-twist.
+
118  Though the point of my nose grow as red as a rose
+
119  Or rival in hue a superb amethyst,
+
120  Yet no matter for that, I tell you 'tis flat,
+
121  I shall still take a pull at a jug of gin-twist.
+
122  There was old Cleobulus, who, meaning to fool us,
+
123  Gave out for his saying,
+
124  But he'd never keep measure, if he had but the pleasure
+
125  Of washing his throat with a jug of gin-twist.
+
126  There are dandies and blockheads, who vapour and boast
+
127  Of the favours of girls they never have kissed;
+
128  That is not the thing, and therefore, by jing!
+
129  I kiss while I'm praising my jug of gin-twist.
+
[36] 130  While over the glass I should be an ass
+
131  To make moping love like a dull Platonist;
+
132  That ne'er was my fashion: I swear that my passion
+
133  Is as hot as itself for a jug of gin-twist.
+
[37] 134  Although it is time to finish my rhyme,
+
135  Yet the subject's so sweet I can scarcely desist;
+
136  While its grateful perfume is delighting the room,
+
137  How can I be mute o'er a jug of gin-twist?
+
[38] 138  Yet since I've made out, without any doubt,
+
139  Of its merits and glories a flourishing list,
+
140  Let us end with a toast, which we cherish the most:
+
141  Here's “God save the King!” in a glass of gin-twist.
+
[39] 142  Then I bade him good-night in a most jolly plight,
+
143  But I'm sorry to say that my footing I missed;
+
144  All the stairs I fell down, so I battered my crown,
+
145  And got two black eyes from a jug of gin-twist.
+
</nowiki>
+
  
Maginn: Miscellanies (1885) : a machine-readable transcript
+
*1  At one in the morn, as I went staggering home,
 +
*2  With nothing at all in my hand but my fist,
 +
*3  At the end of the street a good youth I did meet,
 +
*4  Who asked me to join in a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*5  “Though 'tis late,” I replied, “and I'm muggy beside,
 +
*6  Yet an offer like this I could never resist;
 +
*7  So let's waddle away, sans a moment's delay,
 +
*8  And in style we'll demolish your jug of gin-twist.”
 +
*9  The friends of the grape may boast of rich Cape,
 +
*10  Hock, Claret, Madeira, or Lachryma Christ,
 +
*11  But this muzzle of mine was never so fine
 +
*12  As to value them more than a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*13  The people of Nantz, in the kingdom of France,
 +
*14  Bright brandy they brew, liquor not to be hissed;
 +
*15  It may do as a dram, but 'tis not worth a damn,
 +
*16  When watered, compared with a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*17  Antigua, Jamaica, they certainly make a
 +
*18  Grand species of rum, which should ne'er be dismissed;
 +
*19  It is splendid as grog, but never, you dog,
 +
*20  Esteem it as punch, like a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*21  Ye bailies of Glasgow! Wise men of the West!
 +
*22  Without your rum bowls you'd look certainly tristes;
 +
*23  Yet I laugh when I'm told that liquor so cold
 +
*24  Is as good as a foaming hot jug of gin-twist.
 +
*25  The bog-trotting Teagues in clear whisky delight,
 +
*26  Preferring potsheen to all drinks that exist;
 +
*27  I grieve, ne'ertheless, that it does not possess
 +
*28  The juniper smack of a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*29  Farintosh and Glenlivet, I hear, are the boast
 +
*30  Of those breechesless heroes, the Sons of the Mist;
 +
*31  But may I go choke if that villainous smoke
 +
*32  I'd name in a day with a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*33  Yet the Celtic I love, and should join them, by Jove!
 +
*34  Though Glengarry should vow I'd no right to enlist;
 +
*35  For that chief, do you see, I'd not care a bawbee,
 +
*36  If strongly entrenched o'er a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*37  One rule they lay down is the reason, I own,
 +
*38  Why from joining their plaided array I desist;
 +
*39  Because they declare that no one shall wear
 +
*40  Of breeches a pair, o'er their jugs of gin-twist.
 +
*41  This is plainly absurd, I give you my word,
 +
*42  Of this bare-rumped reg'lation I ne'er saw the gist;
 +
*43  In my gay corduroys, can't these philabeg boys
 +
*44  Suffer me to get drunk o'er my jug of gin-twist?
 +
*45  In India they smack a liquor called rack,
 +
*46  Which I never quaffed (at least that I wist);
 +
*47  I'm told 'tis like tow in its taste, and, if so,
 +
*48  Very different stuff from a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*49  As for porter and ale—'fore Gad, I turn pale,
 +
*50  When people on such things as these can insist;
 +
*51  They may do for dull clods, but, by all of the gods!
 +
*52  They are hog-wash when matched with a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*53  Why tea we import I could never conceive;
 +
*54  To the Mandarin folk, to be sure, it brings grist;
 +
*55  But in our western soils the spirits it spoils,
 +
*56  While to heaven they are raised by a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*57  Look at Hazlitt and Hunt, most unfortunate pair!
 +
*58  Black and blue from the kicks of a stern satirist;
 +
*59  But would Mynheer Izzard once trouble their gizzard,
 +
*60  If bohea they exchanged for a jug of gin-twist?
 +
*61  Leibnitz held that this earth was the first of all worlds,
 +
*62  And no wonder the buck was a firm optimist;
 +
*63  For 'twas always his use, as a proof to adduce
 +
*64  Of the truth of his doctrine, a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*65  It cures all the vapours and mulligrub capers;
 +
*66  It makes you like Howard, the philanthro-pist;
 +
*67  Woe, trouble, and pain, that bother your brain,
 +
*68  Are banished out clean by a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*69  You turn up your nose at all of your foes,
 +
*70  Abuse you, traduce you, they may if they list;
 +
*71  The lawyers, I'm sure, would look very poor,
 +
*72  If their clients would stick to their jugs of gin-twist.
 +
*73  There's Leslie, my friend, who went ramstam to law
 +
*74  Because Petre had styled him a poor Hebraist;
 +
*75  And you see how the jury, in spite of his fury,
 +
*76  Gave him comfort far less than one jug of gin-twist.
 +
*77  And therefore, I guess, sir, the celebre Professor,
 +
*78  Even though culpably quizzed as a mere sciolist,
 +
*79  Would have found it much meeter to have laughed at old Petre,
 +
*80  And got drunk with Kit North o'er a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*81  Its medical virtues a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*82  By its magical aid a toper is made,
 +
*83  Like Brockden Brown's hero, a ventriloquist;
 +
*84  For my belly cries out, with an audible shout,
 +
*85  “Fill up every chink with a jug of gin-twist.”
 +
*86  Geologers all, great, middling, and small,
 +
*87  Whether fiery Plutonian or wet Neptunist,
 +
*88  Most gladly, it seems, seek proofs for their schemes
 +
*89  In the water, or spirit, of a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*90  These grubbers of ground (whom God may confound!),
 +
*91  Forgetting transition, trap, hornblende, or schist,
 +
*92  And all other sorts, think only of quartz—
 +
*93  I mean, of the quarts in a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*94  Though two dozen of verse I've contrived to rehearse,
 +
*95  Yet still I can sing like a true melodist;
 +
*96  For they are but asses who think that Parnassus
 +
*97  In spirit surpasses a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*98  It makes you to speak Dutch, Latin, or Greek;
 +
*99  Even learning Chinese very much 'twould assist:
 +
*100  I'll discourse you in Hebrew, provided that ye brew
 +
*101  A most Massorethical jug of gin-twist.
 +
*102  When its amiable stream, all enveloped in steam,
 +
*103  Is dashed to and fro by a vigorous wrist,
 +
*104  How sweet a cascade every moment is made
 +
*105  By the artist who fashions a jug of gin-twist!
 +
*106  Sweet stream! There is none but delights in thy flow,
 +
*107  Save that vagabond villain, the Whig atheist;
 +
*108  For done was the job for his patron, Sir Bob,
 +
*109  When he dared to wage war 'gainst a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*110  Don't think by its name, from Geneva it came,
 +
*111  The sour little source of the Kirk Calvinist—
 +
*112  A fig for Jack Calvin! My processes alvine
 +
*113  Are much more rejoiced by a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*114  Let the Scotsman delight in malice and spite,
 +
*115  The black-legs at Brooks's in hazard or whist;
 +
*116  Tom Dibdin in books, Micky Taylor in cooks:
 +
*117  My pleasure is fixed in a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*118  Though the point of my nose grow as red as a rose
 +
*119  Or rival in hue a superb amethyst,
 +
*120  Yet no matter for that, I tell you 'tis flat,
 +
*121  I shall still take a pull at a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*122  There was old Cleobulus, who, meaning to fool us,
 +
*123  Gave out for his saying,
 +
*124  But he'd never keep measure, if he had but the pleasure
 +
*125  Of washing his throat with a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*126  There are dandies and blockheads, who vapour and boast
 +
*127  Of the favours of girls they never have kissed;
 +
*128  That is not the thing, and therefore, by jing!
 +
*129  I kiss while I'm praising my jug of gin-twist.
 +
*130  While over the glass I should be an ass
 +
*131  To make moping love like a dull Platonist;
 +
*132  That ne'er was my fashion: I swear that my passion
 +
*133  Is as hot as itself for a jug of gin-twist.
 +
*134  Although it is time to finish my rhyme,
 +
*135  Yet the subject's so sweet I can scarcely desist;
 +
*136  While its grateful perfume is delighting the room,
 +
*137  How can I be mute o'er a jug of gin-twist?
 +
*138  Yet since I've made out, without any doubt,
 +
*139  Of its merits and glories a flourishing list,
 +
*140  Let us end with a toast, which we cherish the most:
 +
*141  Here's “God save the King!” in a glass of gin-twist.
 +
*142  Then I bade him good-night in a most jolly plight,
 +
*143  But I'm sorry to say that my footing I missed;
 +
*144  All the stairs I fell down, so I battered my crown,
 +
*145  And got two black eyes from a jug of gin-twist.
  
City: Cambridge
 
Date: 1992
 
Publisher: Chadwyck-Healey English Poetry Full-Text Database
 
(c) 1992 Chadwyck-Healey. Do not export or print from this database without checking the Copyright Conditions to see what is permitted.
 
  
Poet: William Maginn 1793–1842
 
  
Miscellanies: Prose and Verse. By William Maginn. Edited by R. W. Montagu. Two Volumes
+
Miscellanies (1885): Prose and Verse. By William Maginn. Edited by R. W. Montagu. Two Volumes
 
+
City: London
+
Publisher: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington
+
Date: 1885
+
Description: 2 v.
+
Only unique items in verse included
+

Latest revision as of 15:55, 18 July 2006

A poem about Gin Twist.

William Maginn 1793–1842 Maginn, W.

A Twist-imony in favour of Gin-twist.

  • 1 At one in the morn, as I went staggering home,
  • 2 With nothing at all in my hand but my fist,
  • 3 At the end of the street a good youth I did meet,
  • 4 Who asked me to join in a jug of gin-twist.
  • 5 “Though 'tis late,” I replied, “and I'm muggy beside,
  • 6 Yet an offer like this I could never resist;
  • 7 So let's waddle away, sans a moment's delay,
  • 8 And in style we'll demolish your jug of gin-twist.”
  • 9 The friends of the grape may boast of rich Cape,
  • 10 Hock, Claret, Madeira, or Lachryma Christ,
  • 11 But this muzzle of mine was never so fine
  • 12 As to value them more than a jug of gin-twist.
  • 13 The people of Nantz, in the kingdom of France,
  • 14 Bright brandy they brew, liquor not to be hissed;
  • 15 It may do as a dram, but 'tis not worth a damn,
  • 16 When watered, compared with a jug of gin-twist.
  • 17 Antigua, Jamaica, they certainly make a
  • 18 Grand species of rum, which should ne'er be dismissed;
  • 19 It is splendid as grog, but never, you dog,
  • 20 Esteem it as punch, like a jug of gin-twist.
  • 21 Ye bailies of Glasgow! Wise men of the West!
  • 22 Without your rum bowls you'd look certainly tristes;
  • 23 Yet I laugh when I'm told that liquor so cold
  • 24 Is as good as a foaming hot jug of gin-twist.
  • 25 The bog-trotting Teagues in clear whisky delight,
  • 26 Preferring potsheen to all drinks that exist;
  • 27 I grieve, ne'ertheless, that it does not possess
  • 28 The juniper smack of a jug of gin-twist.
  • 29 Farintosh and Glenlivet, I hear, are the boast
  • 30 Of those breechesless heroes, the Sons of the Mist;
  • 31 But may I go choke if that villainous smoke
  • 32 I'd name in a day with a jug of gin-twist.
  • 33 Yet the Celtic I love, and should join them, by Jove!
  • 34 Though Glengarry should vow I'd no right to enlist;
  • 35 For that chief, do you see, I'd not care a bawbee,
  • 36 If strongly entrenched o'er a jug of gin-twist.
  • 37 One rule they lay down is the reason, I own,
  • 38 Why from joining their plaided array I desist;
  • 39 Because they declare that no one shall wear
  • 40 Of breeches a pair, o'er their jugs of gin-twist.
  • 41 This is plainly absurd, I give you my word,
  • 42 Of this bare-rumped reg'lation I ne'er saw the gist;
  • 43 In my gay corduroys, can't these philabeg boys
  • 44 Suffer me to get drunk o'er my jug of gin-twist?
  • 45 In India they smack a liquor called rack,
  • 46 Which I never quaffed (at least that I wist);
  • 47 I'm told 'tis like tow in its taste, and, if so,
  • 48 Very different stuff from a jug of gin-twist.
  • 49 As for porter and ale—'fore Gad, I turn pale,
  • 50 When people on such things as these can insist;
  • 51 They may do for dull clods, but, by all of the gods!
  • 52 They are hog-wash when matched with a jug of gin-twist.
  • 53 Why tea we import I could never conceive;
  • 54 To the Mandarin folk, to be sure, it brings grist;
  • 55 But in our western soils the spirits it spoils,
  • 56 While to heaven they are raised by a jug of gin-twist.
  • 57 Look at Hazlitt and Hunt, most unfortunate pair!
  • 58 Black and blue from the kicks of a stern satirist;
  • 59 But would Mynheer Izzard once trouble their gizzard,
  • 60 If bohea they exchanged for a jug of gin-twist?
  • 61 Leibnitz held that this earth was the first of all worlds,
  • 62 And no wonder the buck was a firm optimist;
  • 63 For 'twas always his use, as a proof to adduce
  • 64 Of the truth of his doctrine, a jug of gin-twist.
  • 65 It cures all the vapours and mulligrub capers;
  • 66 It makes you like Howard, the philanthro-pist;
  • 67 Woe, trouble, and pain, that bother your brain,
  • 68 Are banished out clean by a jug of gin-twist.
  • 69 You turn up your nose at all of your foes,
  • 70 Abuse you, traduce you, they may if they list;
  • 71 The lawyers, I'm sure, would look very poor,
  • 72 If their clients would stick to their jugs of gin-twist.
  • 73 There's Leslie, my friend, who went ramstam to law
  • 74 Because Petre had styled him a poor Hebraist;
  • 75 And you see how the jury, in spite of his fury,
  • 76 Gave him comfort far less than one jug of gin-twist.
  • 77 And therefore, I guess, sir, the celebre Professor,
  • 78 Even though culpably quizzed as a mere sciolist,
  • 79 Would have found it much meeter to have laughed at old Petre,
  • 80 And got drunk with Kit North o'er a jug of gin-twist.
  • 81 Its medical virtues a jug of gin-twist.
  • 82 By its magical aid a toper is made,
  • 83 Like Brockden Brown's hero, a ventriloquist;
  • 84 For my belly cries out, with an audible shout,
  • 85 “Fill up every chink with a jug of gin-twist.”
  • 86 Geologers all, great, middling, and small,
  • 87 Whether fiery Plutonian or wet Neptunist,
  • 88 Most gladly, it seems, seek proofs for their schemes
  • 89 In the water, or spirit, of a jug of gin-twist.
  • 90 These grubbers of ground (whom God may confound!),
  • 91 Forgetting transition, trap, hornblende, or schist,
  • 92 And all other sorts, think only of quartz—
  • 93 I mean, of the quarts in a jug of gin-twist.
  • 94 Though two dozen of verse I've contrived to rehearse,
  • 95 Yet still I can sing like a true melodist;
  • 96 For they are but asses who think that Parnassus
  • 97 In spirit surpasses a jug of gin-twist.
  • 98 It makes you to speak Dutch, Latin, or Greek;
  • 99 Even learning Chinese very much 'twould assist:
  • 100 I'll discourse you in Hebrew, provided that ye brew
  • 101 A most Massorethical jug of gin-twist.
  • 102 When its amiable stream, all enveloped in steam,
  • 103 Is dashed to and fro by a vigorous wrist,
  • 104 How sweet a cascade every moment is made
  • 105 By the artist who fashions a jug of gin-twist!
  • 106 Sweet stream! There is none but delights in thy flow,
  • 107 Save that vagabond villain, the Whig atheist;
  • 108 For done was the job for his patron, Sir Bob,
  • 109 When he dared to wage war 'gainst a jug of gin-twist.
  • 110 Don't think by its name, from Geneva it came,
  • 111 The sour little source of the Kirk Calvinist—
  • 112 A fig for Jack Calvin! My processes alvine
  • 113 Are much more rejoiced by a jug of gin-twist.
  • 114 Let the Scotsman delight in malice and spite,
  • 115 The black-legs at Brooks's in hazard or whist;
  • 116 Tom Dibdin in books, Micky Taylor in cooks:
  • 117 My pleasure is fixed in a jug of gin-twist.
  • 118 Though the point of my nose grow as red as a rose
  • 119 Or rival in hue a superb amethyst,
  • 120 Yet no matter for that, I tell you 'tis flat,
  • 121 I shall still take a pull at a jug of gin-twist.
  • 122 There was old Cleobulus, who, meaning to fool us,
  • 123 Gave out for his saying,
  • 124 But he'd never keep measure, if he had but the pleasure
  • 125 Of washing his throat with a jug of gin-twist.
  • 126 There are dandies and blockheads, who vapour and boast
  • 127 Of the favours of girls they never have kissed;
  • 128 That is not the thing, and therefore, by jing!
  • 129 I kiss while I'm praising my jug of gin-twist.
  • 130 While over the glass I should be an ass
  • 131 To make moping love like a dull Platonist;
  • 132 That ne'er was my fashion: I swear that my passion
  • 133 Is as hot as itself for a jug of gin-twist.
  • 134 Although it is time to finish my rhyme,
  • 135 Yet the subject's so sweet I can scarcely desist;
  • 136 While its grateful perfume is delighting the room,
  • 137 How can I be mute o'er a jug of gin-twist?
  • 138 Yet since I've made out, without any doubt,
  • 139 Of its merits and glories a flourishing list,
  • 140 Let us end with a toast, which we cherish the most:
  • 141 Here's “God save the King!” in a glass of gin-twist.
  • 142 Then I bade him good-night in a most jolly plight,
  • 143 But I'm sorry to say that my footing I missed;
  • 144 All the stairs I fell down, so I battered my crown,
  • 145 And got two black eyes from a jug of gin-twist.


Miscellanies (1885): Prose and Verse. By William Maginn. Edited by R. W. Montagu. Two Volumes

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