AN ELEGY On the DEATH of Dr. THOMAS SAFFOLD, Who Departed this LIFE May the 12th, 1691. TOM SAFFOLD Dead, that famous Operator, And did no Blazing Star foretell the Matter? No angry Comet with bright Flames her Arse-on, Foretell the Death of so Renowned a Person? Ye illbred Stars, ye know when he was Living, He was each Day from you some Skill receiving; And could ye not afford one Link Celestial, To Light him from Blackfriars House Terrestrial? For very well ye Flaming Lights did know, 'Twas a dark way the Doctor had to go: But we, alas! in vain his Absence mourn; For he is gone, thence never to Return Te's House again, who with his Bills alone, Did with Bumfodder furnish half the Town: So Skilled in Drugs and Verse, 'twas hard to show it, Whether was best, the Doctor or the Poet. For if one Read his Rhymes, a Stool would follow, As sure as if he did a Bolus swallow: So for a double use they served for some, First give a Purge, and then to wipe the Bum. His Skill in Physic did his Fame advance, Tho some accuse him of dull Ignorance: Powder of Post may sometimes do the Trick, As we'll as Rhaharb, Senna, Agarick; For let the sad Disease be what it will, The Patient's Faith helps more than Doctor's Skill; Besides he had so quick, so short a way, No Patient under him long Grieving lay; For was it Fever, Pox, or Calenture, His Drugs could either quickly Kill or Cure. Sometimes perhaps his Guilded Pill prevails; But if that fail, the Dead can tell no Tales, What if his Medicines thousands Lives should spill? Hangmen and Quacks are Authorised to Kill. How I and Lament ye who have had th' mishap, While ye for Pleasure sought, to find a Clap; Who now in Sweating-Tubs devoutly Drivel; Faith Sparks, your Doctor's left you to the Devil; Throw Snot about and shed your briny Tears: Ye Shadwel Dames and Wapping Wastcoteers, Who blushing with your Urinals of Water, Came to his House to understand the Matter, Lament ye Damsels of our London City; (Poor unprovided Girls) though Fair and Witty, Who masked, would to his House in couples come, To understand your Matrimonial Doom; To know what kind of Men you were to Marry, And how long time, poor things, you were to Tarry: Your Oracle is Silent, none can tell On whom his Astrologick Mantle fell; For he when Sick refused all Doctor's Aid, And only to his Pills Devotion Paid; Yet it was surely a most sad Disaster, The Saucy Pills at last should Kill their Master. His EPITAPH. Here Lies the Corpse of Thomas Saffold, By Death, inspite of Physic, Baffted; Who leaving off his working Loom, Did Learned Doctor soon become. To Poetry he made pretence, Is plain to any man's own Sense: But he when Living thought it Sin To hide his Talon in Napkin; Now Death does Poet Doctor crowd Within the Limits of a Shrond. London: Printed for A. Turner, 1691.