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Text divider from 'The Contented Wife, with the Husband's Answer', a chapbook printed in Glasgow in 1802
Text divider from 'The Contented Wife, with the Husband's Answer', a chapbook printed in Glasgow in 1802

THE HUSBAND'S ANSWER.

My wife is a notable girl I must own,
And now I do love her most dearly.
She never did scold when that I came home,
Was I ever so late or so early.
I stagger'd to bed, where all night I did ly,
Snoring fast by her side like a pig in a sty;
I sometimes call'd her names but she ne'er would reply,
No man e'er was happier married.

Her goodness at length did my wildness reclaim,
That I should abuse such good nature:
I thought with myself I was much to blame,
And therefore resolve to grow better.
I've left off my drinking and reveling quite,
My kind wife and children is all my delight,
My health I preserve, and my money stood by me,
No man was e'er happier married.

She is a good wife and a house-wife besides,
Although I have been such a villain,
She will make a groat go further indeed,
Than many one will make a shilling.
She's none of those wives that drinks coffee or tea,
Or gossips about with her neighbours all day,
Or e'er goes abroad unless it's with me,
No man e'er was happier married.

Text divider from 'The Contented Wife, with the Husband's Answer', a chapbook printed in Glasgow in 1802
Text divider from 'The Contented Wife, with the Husband's Answer', a chapbook printed in Glasgow in 1802

GENTLEMEN RAKES of the TOWN.

Did not you hear of the gentlemen rakes,
And hear the sweet cry of beer, wine & cakes,
Whilst we in blue aprons, and clean linen gowns,
For to view all the gentlemen rakes of the town.