The Beggar's Opera (excerpts)

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Air I.An old woman clothed in gray, &c.1-
 Through all the employments of life
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  Each neighbour abuses his brother;
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  Whore and rogue they call husband and wife:
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  All professions be-rogue one another.
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  The priest calls the lawyer a cheat,
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  The lawyer be-knaves the divine;
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  And the statesman, because he's so great,
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  Thinks his trade as honest as mine.Air XI.A Soldier and a Sailor2-
 A fox may steal your hens, sir,
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  A whore your health and pence, sir,
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  Your daughter rob your chest, sir,
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  Your wife may steal your rest, sir,
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  A thief your goods and plate.

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 But this is all but picking,
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  With rest, pence, chest and chicken;
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  It ever was decreed, sir,
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  If lawyer's hand is fee'd, sir,
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  He steals your whole estate.Air XXII.Cotillon3-
 Youth's the season made for joys,
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  Love is then our duty,
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  She alone who that employs,
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  Well deserves her beauty.
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 Let's be gay,
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 While we may,
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 Beauty's a flower, despised in decay.CHORUS.3-
 Youth's the season, &c.Cotillon3-
 Let us drink and sport to-day,
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  Ours is not to-morrow.
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  Love with youth flies swift away,
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  Age is nought but sorrow.
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 Dance and sing,
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 Time's on the wing,
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  Life never knows the return of spring.CHORUS.3-

 Let us drink, &c.Air XXVI.4-
Courtiers, Courtiers think it no harm, &c.4-
 Man may escape from rope and gun;
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  Nay, some have out-liv'd the doctor's pill;
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  Who takes a woman must be undone,
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  That basilisk is sure to kill.
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  The fly that sips treacle is lost in the sweets,
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  So he that tastes woman, woman, woman,
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  He that tastes woman, ruin meets.

© John Gay