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Advice to the Grub Street Verse-Writers

Ye poets ragged and forlorn,
     Down from your garrets haste;
   Ye rhymers, dead as soon as born,
     Not yet consign’d to paste;
    I know a trick to make you thrive;
     O, ’tis a quaint device:
   Your still-born poems shall revive,
     And scorn to wrap up spice.
    Get all your verses printed fair,
    Then let them well be dried;
  And Curll must have a special care
    To leave the margin wide.
 
   Lend these to paper-sparing Pope;
    And when he sets to write,
  No letter with an envelope
    Could give him more delight.
 
   When Pope has fill’d the margins round,
    Why then recall your loan;
  Sell them to Curll for fifty pound,
    And swear they are your own.
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