Moderation In Diet

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The drunkard's sin, excess in wine,
 Which reason drowns, and health destroys,
As yet no failing is of thine,
 Dear Jim; strong drink's not given to boys.


You from the cool fresh stream allay
 Those thirsts which sultry suns excite;
When choked with dust, or hot with play,
 A cup of water yields delight.


And reverence still that temperate cup,
 And cherish long the blameless taste;
To learn the faults of men grown up,
 Dear Jim, be wise and do not haste.


They'll come too soon.-But there's a vice,
 That shares the world's contempt no less;
To be in eating over-nice,
 Or to court surfeits by excess.


The first, as finical, avoid;
 The last is proper to a swine:
By temperance meat is best enjoyed;
 Think of this maxim when you dine.


Prefer with plain food to be fed,
 Rather than what are dainties styled;
A sweet tooth in an infant's head
 Is pardoned, not in a grown child.


If parent, aunt, or liberal friend,
 With splendid shilling line your purse,
Do not the same on sweetmeats spend,
 Nor appetite with pampering nurse.


Go buy a book; a dainty eaten
 Is vanished, and no sweets remain;
They who their minds with knowledge sweeten,
 The savour long as life retain.


Purchase some toy; a horse of wood,
 A pasteboard ship; their structure scan;
Their mimic uses understood
 The school-boy make a kind of man.


Go see some show; pictures or prints;
 Or beasts far brought from Indian land;
Those foreign sights oft furnish hints,
 That may the youthful mind expand.


And something of your store impart,
 To feed the poor and hungry soul;
What buys for you the needless tart,
 May purchase him a needful roll.

© Charles Lamb