The Stolen Lyre
A scribe, who, twenty years ago,
Sold printed lies in Salford town,
To puff dear waves, made dear by law,
Said, “Elliott's lyre grates like a saw;”
(Because its strings were shaking down
The worst rogues that the world e'er saw.)
He died, and, then, another found
That my old lyre “An organ was,
On which I still the cornlaws ground,
To my old creaking tune.” Alas!
The worthy brothers might have shown,
That Elliott's lyre is not his own.
A certain T. P. Thompson bought
Of one A. Smith the “creaking thing,”
And sent it to me, charging nought
For it, and many a brave new string,
That gave its chords a trumpet's tone.
And guilty Fear's conviction brought
To brains of mud, and hearts of stone.
Sold printed lies in Salford town,
To puff dear waves, made dear by law,
Said, “Elliott's lyre grates like a saw;”
(Because its strings were shaking down
The worst rogues that the world e'er saw.)
He died, and, then, another found
That my old lyre “An organ was,
On which I still the cornlaws ground,
To my old creaking tune.” Alas!
The worthy brothers might have shown,
That Elliott's lyre is not his own.
A certain T. P. Thompson bought
Of one A. Smith the “creaking thing,”
And sent it to me, charging nought
For it, and many a brave new string,
That gave its chords a trumpet's tone.
And guilty Fear's conviction brought
To brains of mud, and hearts of stone.
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