"And ev'ry one begins to find / The same impression on his mind."

— Swift, Jonathan (1667-1745)


Date
1724
Metaphor
"And ev'ry one begins to find / The same impression on his mind."
Metaphor in Context
When first the squire and tinker Wood
Gravely consulting Ireland's good,
Together mingled in a mass
Smith's dust, and copper, lead, and brass;
The mixture thus by chemic art
United close in ev'ry part,
In fillets roll'd, or cut in pieces,
Appear'd like one continued species;
And, by the forming engine struck,
On all the same impression took.
So, to confound this hated coin,
All parties and religions join;
Whigs, Tories, Trimmers, Hanoverians,
Quakers, Conformists, Presbyterians,
Scotch, Irish, English, French, unite,
With equal interest, equal spite
Together mingled in a lump,
Do all in one opinion jump;
And ev'ry one begins to find
The same impression on his mind.
(p. 201).
Categories
Provenance
Searching poems at the Swift Society
Citation
The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D. D. Ed. by Willim Ernst Browing. Vol. ii London: G. Bell and Sons, Ltd. 1910.
Date of Entry
06/21/2005
Date of Review
08/06/2009

The Mind is a Metaphor is authored by Brad Pasanek, Assistant Professor of English, University of Virginia.