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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of the Right Honourable John Earl
  • of Rochester, by John Wilmot
  • This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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  • Title: The Works of the Right Honourable John Earl of Rochester
  • Consisting of Satires, Songs, Translations, and other Occasional Poems
  • Author: John Wilmot
  • Release Date: February 13, 2014 [EBook #44891]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOHN EARL OF ROCHESTER ***
  • Produced by Mark C. Orton, Paul Clark and the Online
  • Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
  • book was produced from scanned images of public domain
  • material from the Google Print project.)
  • Transcriber's Note:
  • Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
  • possible.
  • Italic text has been marked with _underscores_.
  • OE ligatures have been expanded.
  • THE WORKS OF THE
  • RIGHT HONOURABLE
  • _JOHN_ Earl of _Rochester_.
  • Consisting of
  • SATIRES, SONGS, TRANSLATIONS,
  • AND OTHER
  • Occasional POEMS.
  • [Illustration]
  • _LONDON_:
  • Printed for the Booksellers of _London_ and
  • _Westminster_. 1718. Price 1 _s._
  • [Illustration]
  • THE CONTENTS.
  • A _Satire against Mankind_. Page 3
  • _Tunbridge-Wells: A Satire._ p. 11
  • Horace_'s Nempe incomposita dixi pede, &c. imitated._ p. 19
  • _A Satire against Marriage._ p. 25
  • _A Letter from _Artemisa_ in the Town, to _Cloe_ in the
  • Country._ p. 29
  • _An Epistolary Essay from _M. G._ to _O. B._ upon their mutual
  • Poems._ p. 41
  • _The maim'd Debauchee._ p. 46
  • _Upon Nothing._ p. 49
  • _The Advice._ p. 53
  • _The Discovery._ p. 56
  • _The ninth Elegy in the second Book of _Ovid_'s Amours
  • translated._ To Love. p. 58
  • _Woman's Honour. A Song._ p. 62
  • _Grecian Kindness. A Song._ p. 64
  • _The Mistress. A Song._ p. 65
  • _A Song._ p. 67
  • _To _Corinna_. A Song._ p. 69
  • _A Young Lady to her antient Lover. A Song._ p. 71
  • _To a Lady, in a Letter. A Song._ p. 73
  • _The Fall. A Song._ p. 75
  • _Love and Life. A Song._ p. 77
  • _A Song._ p. 78
  • _A Song._ p. 79
  • _A Song._ p. 80
  • _Upon his leaving his Mistress._ p. 82
  • _Upon drinking in a Bowl._ p. 84
  • _A Song._ p. 86
  • _A Song._ p. 88
  • _The Answer._ p. 89
  • _A Song._ p. 91
  • _Constancy. A Song._ p. 94
  • _A Song._ p. 95
  • [Illustration]
  • _FINIS._
  • A SATIRE AGAINST MANKIND.
  • Were I, who to my Cost already am,
  • One of those strange, prodigious Creatures _Man_,
  • A Spirit free, to chuse for my own Share, }
  • What Sort of Flesh and Blood I pleas'd to wear, }
  • I'd be a Dog, a Monkey, or a Bear; }
  • Or any thing, but that vain Animal,
  • Who is so proud of being Rational.
  • The Senses are too gross; and he'll contrive
  • A sixth, to contradict the other five:
  • And before certain Instinct, will prefer
  • Reason, which fifty Times for one does err.
  • Reason, an _Ignis Fatuus_ of the Mind,
  • Which leaves the Light of Nature, Sense, behind.
  • Pathless, and dang'rous, wand'ring Ways it takes,
  • Thro Error's fenny Boggs, and thorny Brakes:
  • Whilst the misguided Follower climbs with Pain
  • Mountains of Whimseys heapt in his own Brain;
  • Stumbling from Thought to Thought, falls headlong down
  • Into Doubt's boundless Sea, where like to drown,
  • Books bear him up a while, and make him try
  • To swim with Bladders of Philosophy:
  • In hopes still to o'ertake the skipping Light, }
  • The Vapour dances in his dazzled Sight, }
  • Till spent, it leaves him to eternal Night. }
  • Then old Age and Experience, Hand in Hand,
  • Lead him to Death, and make him understand,
  • After a Search so painful, and so long,
  • That all his Life he has been in the wrong.
  • Huddled in Dirt the reas'ning Engine lies,
  • Who was so proud, so witty, and so wise:
  • Pride drew him in, as Cheats their Bubbles catch,
  • And made him venture to be made a Wretch:
  • His Wisdom did his Happiness destroy,
  • Aiming to know the World he should enjoy.
  • And Wit was his vain frivolous Pretence,
  • Of pleasing others at his own Expence.
  • For _Wits_ are treated just like _Common-Whores_;
  • First they're enjoy'd, and then kick'd out of Doors.
  • The Pleasure past, a threat'ning Doubt remains,
  • That frights th' Enjoyer with succeeding Pains.
  • Women, and Men of Wit are dang'rous Tools,
  • And ever fatal to admiring Fools.
  • Pleasure allures, and when the Fops escape, }
  • 'Tis not that they're belov'd, but fortunate; }
  • And therefore what they fear, at Heart they hate. }
  • But now methinks some formal Band and Beard
  • Takes me to Task, Come on, Sir, I am prepar'd:
  • Then by your favour, any thing that's writ
  • Against this gibing, gingling Knack call'd Wit,
  • Likes me abundantly; but you'll take Care
  • Upon this Point not to be too severe:
  • Perhaps my Muse were fitter for this Part; }
  • For I profess I can be very smart }
  • On Wit, which I abhor with all my Heart. }
  • I long to lash it in some sharp Essay, }
  • But your grand Indiscretion bids me stay, }
  • And turns my Tide of Ink another Way. }
  • What Rage ferments in your degen'rate Mind,
  • To make you rail at Reason and Mankind?
  • Blest glorious Man, to whom alone kind Heav'n
  • An everlasting Soul hath freely giv'n;
  • Whom his great Maker took such Care to make,
  • That from himself he did the Image take;
  • And this fair Frame in shining Reason drest,
  • To dignify his Nature above Beast.
  • Reason, by whose aspiring Influence,
  • We take a Flight beyond Material Sense,
  • Dive into Mysteries, then soaring pierce
  • The flaming Limits of the Universe;
  • Search Heav'n and Hell, find out what's acted there,
  • And give the World true Grounds of Hope and Fear.
  • Hold, mighty Man, I cry; all this we know
  • From the pathetick Pen of _Ingelo_:
  • From _Patrick_'s Pilgrim, _Sibb_'s Soliloquies,
  • And 'tis this very Reason I despise;
  • This supernat'ral Gift, that makes a Mite
  • Think he's the Image of the Infinite;
  • Comparing his short Life, void of all Rest,
  • To the eternal and the ever-blest:
  • This busy, puzzling, Stirrer up of Doubt,
  • That frames deep Mysteries, then finds 'em out,
  • Filling with frantick Crouds of thinking Fools,
  • The rev'rend Bedlams, Colleges and Schools,
  • Born on whose Wings each heavy Sot can pierce
  • The Limits of the boundless Universe.
  • So charming Ointments make an old Witch fly,
  • And bear a crippl'd Carcase thro' the Sky.
  • 'Tis this exalted Pow'r whose Bus'ness lies
  • In Nonsense and Impossibilities:
  • This made a whimsical Philosopher,
  • Before the spacious World his Tub prefer:
  • And we have many modern Coxcombs who
  • Retire to think, 'cause they have nought to do.
  • But Thoughts were giv'n for Action's Government;
  • Where Action ceases, Thought's impertinent.
  • Our Sphere of Action is Life's Happiness,
  • And he that thinks beyond, thinks like an Ass.
  • Thus whilst against false Reas'ning I inveigh,
  • I own right Reason, which I would obey;
  • That Reason which distinguishes by Sense,
  • And gives us Rules of Good and Ill from thence;
  • That bounds Desires with a reforming Will,
  • To keep them more in Vigour, not to kill:
  • Your Reason hinders, mine helps to enjoy,
  • Renewing Appetites yours would destroy.
  • My Reason is my Friend, yours is a Cheat,
  • Hunger calls out, my Reason bids my eat;
  • Perversly yours your Appetite do's mock;
  • This asks for Food, that answers what's't a Clock.
  • This plain Distinction, Sir, your Doubt secures;
  • 'Tis not true Reason, I despise but yours.
  • Thus, I think Reason righted: But for Man,
  • I'll ne'er recant, defend him if you can.
  • For all his Pride, and his Philosophy, }
  • 'Tis evident Beasts are, in their Degree, }
  • As wise at least, and better far than he. }
  • Those Creatures are the wisest, who attain
  • By surest Means, the Ends at which they aim.
  • If therefore _Jowler_ finds, and kills his Hare,
  • Better than _Meres_ supplies Committee Chair;
  • Tho' one's a Statesman, t'other but a Hound;
  • _Jowler_ in Justice will be wiser found.
  • You see how far Man's Wisdom here extends:
  • Look next if Human Nature makes amends;
  • Whose Principles are most generous and just,
  • And to whose Morals you wou'd sooner trust.
  • Be judge your self, I'll bring it to the Test,
  • Which is the basest Creature, Man, or Beast:
  • Birds feed on Birds, Beasts on each other prey,
  • But savage Man alone do's Man betray.
  • Prest by Necessity, _They_ kill for Food;
  • Man undoes Man, to do himself no good.
  • With Teeth and Claws, by Nature arm'd, _They_ hunt
  • Nature's Allowance, to supply their Want:
  • But Man with Smiles, Embraces, Friendships, Praise,
  • Inhumanly his Fellow's Life betrays;
  • With voluntary Pains works his Distress;
  • Not thro' Necessity, but Wantonness.
  • For Hunger, or for Love, _They_ bite, or tear,
  • Whilst wretched Man is still in Arms for Fear;
  • For Fear he arms, and is of Arms afraid;
  • From Fear to Fear successively betray'd.
  • Base Fear, the Source whence his best Passions came,
  • His boasted Honour, and his dear-bought Fame:
  • The Lust of Pow'r, to which he's such a Slave,
  • And for the which alone he dares be brave:
  • To which his various Projects are design'd,
  • Which makes him gen'rous, affable, and kind:
  • For which he takes such Pains to be thought wise,
  • And scrues his Actions in a forc'd Disguise:
  • Leads a most tedious Life in Misery,
  • Under laborious, mean Hypocrisy.
  • Look to the Bottom of his vast Design,
  • Wherein Man's Wisdom, Pow'r, and Glory join;
  • The Good he acts, the Ill he do's endure,
  • 'Tis all from Fear, to make himself secure.
  • Meerly for Safety, after Fame they thirst;
  • For all Men would be Cowards, if they durst:
  • And Honesty's against all common Sense,
  • Men must be Knaves; 'tis in their own Defence
  • Mankind's dishonest: If they think it fair,
  • Amongst known Cheats, to play upon the Square,
  • You'll be undone--
  • Nor can weak Truth your Reputation save;
  • The Knaves will all agree to call you Knave.
  • Wrong'd shall he live, insulted o'er, opprest,
  • Who dares be less a Villain than the rest.
  • Thus here you see what Human Nature craves,
  • Most Men are Cowards, all Men shou'd be Knaves.
  • The Difference lies, as far as I can see,
  • Not in the thing it self, but the Degree;
  • And all the Subject Matter of Debate,
  • Is only who's a Knave of the first Rate.
  • _Tunbridge-WELLS_:
  • A SATIRE.
  • At Five this Morn, when _Phoebus_ rais'd his Head
  • From _Thetis_ Lap, I rais'd my self from Bed;
  • And mounting Steed, I trotted to the Waters, }
  • The Rendezvous of Fools, Buffoons, and Praters, }
  • Cuckolds, Whores, Citizens, their Wives and Daughters. }
  • My squeamish Stomach I with Wine had brib'd,
  • To undertake the Dose that was prescrib'd;
  • But turning Head, a sudden cursed Crew, }
  • That innocent Provision overthrew, }
  • And without drinking, made me purge and spew; }
  • From Coach and Six, a Thing unwieldy roll'd,
  • Whom Lumber-Cart more decently would hold,
  • As wise as Calf it look'd, as big as Bully,
  • But handled, prov'd a meer Sir _Nich'las Cully_:
  • A bawling Fop, a _Nat'ral Nokes_, and yet
  • He dar'd to censure, to be thought a Wit.
  • To make him more ridiculous in Spite,
  • Nature contriv'd the Fool should be a Knight.
  • How wise is Nature when she does dispense
  • A large Estate to cover Want of Sense.
  • The Man's a Fool, 'tis true, but that's no Matter, }
  • For he's a mighty Wit with those that flatter, }
  • But a poor Blockhead is a wretched Creature. }
  • _Grant the unlucky Stars, this o'ergrown Boy
  • To purchase some aspiring pretty Toy,
  • That may his Want of Sense and Wit supply,
  • As Buxom Crab-fish doth his Lechery._
  • Tho' he alone was dismal Sight enough, }
  • His Train contributed to set him off; }
  • All of his Shape, all of the self-same Stuff: }
  • No Spleen or Malice could on them be thrown, }
  • Nature had done the Bus'ness of Lampoon, }
  • And in their Looks their Characters were shewn. }
  • Endeavouring this irksome Sight to baulk, }
  • And a more irksom Noise, their silly Talk; }
  • I silently slunk down to'th Lower Walk. }
  • But often when one would _Charybdis_ shun,
  • Down upon _Scylla_ 'tis our Fate to run:
  • For there it was my cursed Luck to find
  • As great a Fop, tho' of another kind;
  • A tall, stiff Fool, that walk'd in _Spanish_ Guise, }
  • The Buckram Poppet never stirrd his Eyes, }
  • But grave as Owl he look'd, as Woodcock wise. }
  • He scorns the empty Talk of this made Age,
  • And speaks all Proverb, Sentence, and Adage:
  • Can with as much Solemnity buy Eggs,
  • As a Cabal can talk of their Intrigues:
  • Master of Ceremonies, yet can't dispense
  • With the Formality of Talking Sense.
  • From whence unto the Upper Walk I came,
  • Where a new Scene of Foppery began;
  • A Tribe of Curates, Priests, Canonical Elves,
  • Fit Company for none besides themselves,
  • Were got together; each his Distemper told,
  • Scurvy, Stone, Strangury; some were so bold,
  • To charge the Spleen to be their Misery,
  • And on that wise Disease lay Infamy:
  • But none had Modesty enough t'explain }
  • His Want of Learning, Honesty, or Brain, }
  • The general Diseases of that Train. }
  • These call themselves Ambassadors of Heaven,
  • And sawcily pretend Commissions given:
  • But should an _Indian_ King, whose small Command
  • Seldom extends beyond ten Miles of Land,
  • Send forth such wretched Fools on an Embassage.
  • He'd find but small Effects of such a Message.
  • List'ning, I found the Cob of all this Rabble,
  • Pert _Bayes_ with his Importance comfortable;
  • He being rais'd to an Archdeaconry,
  • By trampling on Religion, Liberty,
  • Was grown so great, and look'd too fat and jolly }
  • To be disturb'd with Care and Melancholly, }
  • Tho' _Marvel_ had enough expos'd his Folly. }
  • He drank to carry off some old Remains
  • His lazy dull Distemper left in's Brains;
  • Let him drink on; but 'tis not a whole Flood }
  • Can give sufficient Sweetness to his Blood, }
  • To make his Nature, or his Manners good. }
  • _Importance_ drank too, _tho' she had been no Sinner,
  • To wash away some Dregs he had spew'd in her_.
  • Next after these, a fulsom _Irish_ Crew
  • Of silly _Macks_ were offer'd to my View;
  • The things did talk, but hearing what they said,
  • I hid my self the Kindness to evade.
  • Nature had plac'd these Wretches beneath Scorn,
  • They can't be call'd so vile as they are born.
  • Amidst the Crowd, next I my self convey'd,
  • For now there comes, White-Wash and Paint being laid,
  • Mother and Daughter, Mistress and the Maid,
  • And Squire with Wig and Pantaloons display'd.
  • But ne'er could Conventicle, Play, or Fair,
  • For a true Medly with this Herd compare,
  • Here Lords, Knights, Squires, Ladies, and Countesses,
  • Chandlers, and barren Women, Sempstresses,
  • Were mix'd together; nor did they agree
  • More in their Humours, than their Quality.
  • Here waiting for Gallant young Damsel stood
  • Leaning on Cane, and muffl'd up in Hood.
  • The Wou'd-be-wit, whose Bus'ness was to woe,
  • With Hat remov'd, and solemn Scrape of Shoe,
  • Advances bowing, then gentilely shrugs,
  • And ruffl'd Fore-top into Order tugs;
  • And thus accosts her: _Madam, methinks the Weather
  • Is grown much more serene, since you came hither:
  • You influence the Heav'ns; but shou'd the Sun
  • Withdraw himself, to see his Rays outdone
  • By your bright Eyes, they could supply the Morn,
  • And make a Day, before the Day be born._
  • With Mouth screw'd up, conceited winking Eyes,
  • And Breast thrust forward, _Lard Sir_, she replies,
  • _It is your Goodness, and not my Deserts,
  • Which makes you shew this Learning, Wit, and Parts._
  • He puzzled, bites his Nails, both to display
  • The sparkling Ring, and think what next to say,
  • And thus breaks forth afresh; _Madam, Egad,
  • Your Luck at Cards, last Night, was very bad;
  • At Cribbidge Fifty Nine, and the next Shew,
  • To make the Game, and yet to want these Two.
  • G--D--me, Madam, I'm the Son of a Whore,
  • If, in my Life, I saw the like before._
  • To Pedlar's Stall he drags her, and her Breast
  • With Hearts, and such like foolish Toys he drest,
  • And then, more smartly to expound the Riddle
  • Of all his Prattle, gives her a _Scotch_ Fiddle.
  • Tir'd with this dismal Stuff, away I ran, }
  • Where were two Wives, with Girl just fit for Man, }
  • Short-breath'd, and palled Lips, and Visage wan. }
  • Some Court'sies past, and the old Compliment
  • Of being glad to see each other, spent,
  • With Hand in Hand they lovingly did walk,
  • And one began thus to renew the Talk:
  • _I pray, Good Madam, if it mayn't be thought
  • Rudeness in me, what Cause has hither brought
  • Your Ladyship?_ She soon replying, smil'd,
  • _We've got a good Estate, but have no Child;
  • And I'm inform'd, these Wells will make a barren
  • Woman as fruitful as a Coney-Warren._
  • The first return'd, _For this Cause I am come,
  • For I can have no Quietness at Home;
  • My Husband grumbles, tho' we have got one,
  • This poor young Girl, and mutters for a Son:
  • And this is griev'd with Head-ach, Pangs, and Throws,
  • Is full Sixteen, and never yet had Those._
  • She soon reply'd, _Get her a Husband, Madam;
  • I marry'd about that Age, and ne'er had had 'em
  • Was just like her, Steel Waters let alone,
  • A Back of Steel will better bring Them down.
  • And Ten to one, but they themselves will try
  • The same Means to increase the Family._
  • Poor silly Fribble! who by Subtilty,
  • Of Midwife, truest Friend to Lechery,
  • Perswaded art to be at Pains and Charge,
  • To give thy Wife Occasion to enlarge
  • Thy silly Head: For here walks _Cuff_ and _Kick_,
  • With Brawny Back, and Legs, and potent P----,
  • Who more substantially can cure thy Wife,
  • And on her half-dead Womb bestow new Life;
  • From these the Waters got their Reputation
  • Of good Assistants unto Propagation.
  • Some warlike Men were now got into th' Throng,
  • With Hair ty'd back, singing a bawdy Song;
  • Not much afraid, I got a nearer View,
  • And 'twas my Chance to know the dreadful Crew;
  • They were Cadets, that seldom can appear,
  • Damn'd to the Stint of Thirty Pounds a Year;
  • With Hawk on Fist, and Grey-Hound led in Hand,
  • The Dog and Foot-Boys sometimes to command,
  • And now having trimm'd a Cast of spavin'd Horse, }
  • With Three Half-Pence for Guineas in their Purse, }
  • Two rusty Pistols, Scarf about their Arse, }
  • Coat lin'd with Red, they here presume to swell,
  • This goes for Captain, that for Collonel.
  • So the Bear-Garden Ape, on his Steed mounted,
  • No longer is a Jackanapes accounted;
  • And is, by virtue of his Trump'ry, then
  • Call'd by the Name of the young Gentleman:
  • Bless me! thought I, what thing is Man, that thus
  • In all his Shapes is so ridiculous?
  • Our selves with Noise of Reason we do please,
  • In vain Humanity is our worst Disease;
  • Thrice happy Beasts are, who because they be
  • Of Reason void, are so of Foppery.
  • _Faith, I was so asham'd, that with Remorse,
  • I us'd the Insolence to mount my Horse;
  • For he doing only Things fit for his Nature,
  • Did seem to me by much the wiser Creature._
  • _HORACE_'s _Nempe incomposito dixi pede_, &c. IMITATED.
  • Well, Sir, 'tis granted, I said _Dryden_'s Rhimes
  • Were stoll'n, unequal, nay, dull many Times:
  • What foolish Patron is there found of his
  • So blindly partial to deny me this?
  • But that his Plays embroider'd up and down }
  • With Wit and Learning, justly please the Town, }
  • In the same Paper I as freely own. }
  • Yet having this allow'd, the heavy Mass
  • That stuffs up his loose Volumes, must not pass:
  • For by that Rule, I might as well admit
  • _Crown_'s tedious Sense for Poetry and Wit.
  • 'Tis therefore not enough, when your false Sense
  • Hits the false Judgment of an Audience
  • Of clapping Fools assembling, a vast Crowd,
  • Till the throng'd Play-House crack with the dull Load;
  • Tho' ev'n that Talent merits, in some sort,
  • That can divert the Rabble and the Court;
  • Which blund'ring _Settle_ never could attain,
  • And puzz'ling _Otway_ labours at in vain:
  • But within due Proportion circumscribe
  • Whate'er you write, that with a flowing Tide
  • The Stile may rise, yet in its Rise forbear
  • With useless Words t'oppress the weary'd Ear.
  • Here be your Language lofty, there more light,
  • Your Rhet'rick with your Poetry unite:
  • For Elegance sake, sometimes allay the Force
  • Of Epithets, 'twill soften the Discourse
  • A Jest in Scorn points out, and hits the Thing
  • More home, than the morosest Satyr's Sting.
  • _Shakespear_ and _Johnson_ did in this excel,
  • And might herein be imitated well;
  • Whom refin'd _Etherege_ copies not at all,
  • But is himself a meer Original;
  • Nor that slow Drudge in swift Pindarick Strains, }
  • _Flatman_, who _Cowley_ imitates with Pains, }
  • And rides a jaded Muse, whipt, with loose Reins. }
  • When _Lee_ makes temp'rate _Scipio_ fret and rave,
  • And _Hannibal_ a whining am'rous Slave,
  • I laugh, and wish the hot-brain'd Fustian Fool
  • In _Busby_'s Hands, to be well lash'd at School.
  • Of all our modern Wits, none seem to me }
  • Once to have touch'd upon true _Comedy_, }
  • But hasty _Shadwell_, and slow _Wycherley_. }
  • _Shadwell_'s unfinish'd Works do yet impart
  • Great Proofs of Force of Nature, none of Art;
  • With just bold Stokes he dashes here and there,
  • Shewing great Mastery with little Care;
  • Scorning to varnish his good Touches o'er,
  • To make the Fools and Women praise him more:
  • But _Wycherley_ earns hard whate'er he gains;
  • He wants no Judgment, and he spares no Pains:
  • He frequently excells, and at the least,
  • Makes fewer Faults than any of the rest.
  • _Waller_, by Nature for the Bays design'd, }
  • With Force, and Fire, and Fancy, unconfin'd, }
  • In Panegyrick do's excel Mankind: }
  • He best can turn, enforce, and soften things,
  • To praise great Conquerors, and flatter Kings.
  • For pointed Satyr I would _Buckhurst_ choose,
  • The best Good Man with the worst-natur'd Muse.
  • For Songs and Verses mannerly obscene, }
  • That can stir Nature up by Springs unseen, }
  • And, without forcing Blushes, warm the Queen; }
  • _Sedley_ has that prevailing, gentle Art, }
  • That can with a resistless Pow'r impart }
  • The loosest Wishes to the chastest Heart; }
  • Raise such a Conflict, kindle such a Fire
  • Betwixt declining Virtue and Desire,
  • Till the poor vanquish'd Maid dissolves away
  • In Dreams all Night, in Sighs and Tears all Day.
  • _Dryden_ in vain try'd this nice Way of Wit,
  • For he to be a tearing Blade thought fit;
  • But when he would be sharp, he still was blunt,
  • To frisk and frolick Fancy he'd cry ----
  • Wou'd give the Ladies a dry bawdy Bob;
  • And thus he got the Name of Poet Squab:
  • But to be just, 'twill to his Praise be found,
  • His Excellences more than Faults abound;
  • Nor dare I from his sacred Temples tear
  • The Laurel, which he best deserves to wear;
  • But do's not _Dryden_ find ev'n _Johnson_ dull?
  • _Beaumont_ and _Fletcher_ incorrect and full
  • Of _Lewd Lines_, as he calls 'em? _Shakespear_'s Stile
  • Stiff and affected? To his own the while,
  • Allowing all the Justice that his Pride
  • So arrogantly had to these deny'd?
  • And may not I have Leave impartially
  • To search and censure _Dryden_'s Works, and try
  • If those gross Faults his choice Pen doth commit,
  • Proceed from Want of Judgment, or of Wit?
  • Or if his lumpish Fancy do's refuse
  • Spirit and Grace to his loose slattern Muse?
  • Five Hundred Verses ev'ry Morning writ
  • Prove him no more a Poet than a Wit:
  • Such scribb'ling Authors have been seen before, }
  • _Mustapha_, the _Island Princess_, Forty more, }
  • Were things, perhaps, compos'd in Half an Hour. }
  • To write, what may securely stand the Test
  • Of being well read over, thrice at least;
  • Compare each Phrase, examine ev'ry Line,
  • Weigh ev'ry Word, and ev'ry Thought refine;
  • Scorn all Applause the vile Rout can bestow,
  • And be content to please those few who know.
  • Canst thou be such a vain mistaken Thing,
  • To wish thy Works might make a Play-house ring
  • With the unthinking Laughter and poor Praise
  • Of Fops and Ladies factious for thy Plays?
  • Then send a cunning Friend to learn thy Doom
  • From the shrewd Judges in the Drawing Room.
  • I've no Ambition on that idle Score, }
  • But say with _Betty Morris_ heretofore, }
  • When a Court Lady call'd her _Buckhurst_'s Whore: }
  • I please one Man of Wit, am proud on't too,
  • Let all the Coxcombs dance to Bed to you.
  • Should I be troubled when the purblind Knight, }
  • Who squints more in his Judgment, than his Sight, }
  • Picks silly Faults, and censures what I write? }
  • Or when the poor-fed Poets of the Town,
  • For Scraps and Coach-room cry my Verses down?
  • I loath the Rabble; 'tis enough for me;
  • If _Sedley_, _Shadwell_, _Sheppard_, _Wycherley_,
  • _Godolphin_, _Butler_, _Buckhurst_, _Buckingham_, }
  • And some few more, whom I omit to name, }
  • Approve my Sense, I count their Censure Fame. }
  • A SATIRE AGAINST MARRIAGE.
  • Husband, thou dull unpitied Miscreant,
  • Wedded to Noise, to Misery and Want:
  • Sold an eternal Vassal for thy Life,
  • Oblig'd to cherish, and to hate thy Wife:
  • Drudge on till Fifty at thy own Expence,
  • Breathe out thy Life in one Impertinence:
  • Repeat thy loath'd Embraces every Night,
  • Prompted to act by Duty, not Delight:
  • Christen thy froward Bantling once a Year,
  • And carefully thy spurious Issue rear:
  • Go once a Week to see the Brat at Nurse,
  • And let the young Impostor drain thy Purse:
  • Hedge-Sparrow-like, what Cuckows have begot,
  • Do thou maintain, incorrigible Sot.
  • O! I could curse the Pimp, (who could do less?)
  • He's beneath Pity, and beyond Redress.
  • Pox on him, let him go, what can I say?
  • _Anathema_'s on him are thrown away:
  • The Wretch is marry'd and hath known the worst;
  • And his great Blessing is, he can't be curst.
  • _Marriage!_ O Hell and Furies! name it not;
  • Hence, ye holy Cheats, a Plot, a Plot!
  • _Marriage!_ 'Tis but a licens'd Way to sin;
  • A Noose to catch religious Woodcocks in:
  • Or the Nick-Name of Love's malicious Fiend,
  • Begot in Hell to persecute Mankind:
  • 'Tis the Destroyer of our Peace and Health,
  • Mispender of our Time, our Strength and Wealth;
  • The Enemy of Valour, Wit, Mirth, all
  • That we can virtuous, good, or pleasant call:
  • By Day 'tis nothing but an endless Noise,
  • By Night the Eccho of forgotten Joys:
  • Abroad the Sport and Wonder of the Crowd,
  • At Home the hourly Breach of what they vow'd:
  • In Youth it's _Opium_ to our lustful Rage,
  • Which sleeps awhile, but wakes again in Age:
  • It heaps on all Men much, but useless Care;
  • For with more Trouble they less happy are.
  • Ye Gods! that Man, by his own Slavish Law,
  • Should on himself such Inconvenience draw.
  • If he would wiser Nature's Laws obey,
  • Those chalk him out a far more pleasant Way,
  • When lusty Youth and fragrant Wine conspire
  • To fan the Blood into a gen'rous Fire.
  • We must not think the Gallant will endure
  • The puissant Issue of his Calenture,
  • Nor always in his single Pleasures burn,
  • Tho' Nature's Handmaid sometimes serves the Turn:
  • No: He must have a sprightly, youthful Wench,
  • In equal Floods of Love his Flames to quench:
  • One that will hold him in her clasping Arms,
  • And in that Circle all his Spirits charms;
  • That with new Motion and unpractis'd Art,
  • Can raise his Soul, and reinsnare his Heart.
  • Hence spring the Noble, Fortunate, and Great,
  • Always begot in Passion and in Heat:
  • But the dull Offspring of the Marriage-Bed,
  • What is it! but a human Piece of Lead;
  • A sottish Lump ingender'd of all Ills;
  • Begot like Cats against their Fathers Wills.
  • If it be bastardis'd, 'tis doubly spoil'd,
  • The Mother's Fear's entail'd upon the Child.
  • Thus whether illegitimate, or not,
  • Cowards and Fools in Wedlock are begot.
  • Let no enabled Soul himself debase
  • By lawful Means to bastardise his Race;
  • But if he must pay Nature's Debt in Kind,
  • To check his eager Passion, let him find
  • Some willing Female out, who, tho' she be
  • The very Dregs and Scum of Infamy:
  • Tho' she be Linsey-Woolsey, Bawd, and Whore,
  • Close-stool to _Venus_, Nature's Common-Shore,
  • Impudent, Foolish, Bawdy, and Disease,
  • The Sunday Crack of Suburb-Prentices;
  • What then! She's better than a Wife by half;
  • And if thour't still unmarried, thou art safe.
  • With Whores thou canst but venture; what thou'st lost,
  • May be redeem'd again with Care and Cost;
  • But a damn'd Wife, by inevitable Fate,
  • Destroys Soul, Body, Credit, and Estate.
  • A LETTER FROM _Artemisa_ in the Town, TO _CLOE_ in the Country.
  • _Cloe_, by your Command, in Verse I write:
  • Shortly you'll bid me ride astride, and fight:
  • Such Talents better with our Sex agree,
  • Than lofty Flights of dangerous Poetry.
  • Among the Men, I mean the Men of Wit,
  • (At least, they past for such before they writ)
  • How many bold Advent'rers for the Bays,
  • Proudly designing large Returns of Praise;
  • Who durst that stormy, pathless World explore, }
  • Were soon dash'd back, and wreck'd on the dull Shore, }
  • Broke of that little Stock they had before. }
  • How wou'd a Woman's tott'ring Bark be tost,
  • Where stoutest Ships, (the Men of Wit) are lost?
  • When I reflect on this, I streight grow wise,
  • And my own self I gravely thus advise.
  • Dear _Artemisa_! Poetry's a Snare:
  • _Bedlam_ has many Mansions; have a Care:
  • Your Muse diverts you, makes the Reader sad:
  • You think your self inspir'd, he thinks you mad:
  • Consider too, 'twill be discreetly done,
  • To make your self the Fiddle of the Town:
  • To find th' ill-humour'd Pleasure at their Need;
  • Curst when you fail, and scorn'd when you succeed.
  • Thus, like an arrant Woman, as I am, }
  • No sooner well convinc'd Writing's a Shame, }
  • That _Whore_ is scarce a more reproachful Name }
  • Than Poetess--
  • Like Men that marry, or like Maids that woo,
  • because 'tis th' very worst thing they can do:
  • Pleas'd with the Contradiction, and the Sin,
  • Methinks I stand on Thorns till I begin.
  • Y'expect to hear, at least, what Love has past
  • In this lewd Town, since you and I saw last;
  • What Change has happen'd of Intrigues, and whether
  • The old ones last, and who and who's together.
  • But how, my dearest _Cloe_, shou'd I set
  • My Pen to write, what I wou'd fain forget?
  • Or name that lost thing Love without a Tear,
  • Since so debauch'd by ill-bred Customs here?
  • Love, the most gen'rous Passion of the Mind;
  • The softest Refuge Innocence can find;
  • The safe Director of unguided Youth;
  • Fraught with kind Wishes, and secur'd by Truth:
  • That Cordial-drop Heav'n in our Cup has thrown,
  • To make the nauseous Draught of Life go down:
  • On which one only Blessing God might raise,
  • In Lands of Atheists, Subsidies of Praise:
  • For none did e'er so dull and stupid prove,
  • But felt a God, and bless'd his Pow'r in Love:
  • This only Joy, for which poor we are made,
  • Is grown, like Play, to be an arrant Trade:
  • The Rooks creep in, and it has got of late,
  • As many little Cheats and Tricks as that.
  • But, what yet more a Woman's Heart wou'd vex,
  • 'Tis chiefly carry'd on by our own Sex.
  • Our silly Sex, who, born like Monarchs, free, }
  • Turn Gypsies for a meaner Liberty; }
  • And hate Restraint, tho' but from Infamy: }
  • They call whatever is not common nice, }
  • And, deaf to Nature's Rule, or Love's Advice, }
  • Forsake the Pleasure to pursue the Vice. }
  • To an exact Perfection they have brought
  • The Action Love; the Passion is forgot.
  • 'Tis below Wit, they tell you, to admire;
  • And ev'n without approving, they desire.
  • Their private Wish obeys the publick Voice,
  • 'Twixt Good and Bad, Whimsey decides, not Choice.
  • Fashions grow up for Taste, at Forms they strike;
  • They know not what they wou'd have, nor what they like.
  • _Bovy_'s a Beauty, if some few agree }
  • To call him so, the rest to that Degree }
  • Affected are, that with their Ears they see. }
  • Where I was visiting the other Night,
  • Comes a fine Lady with her humble Knight,
  • Who had prevail'd with her, thro' her own Skill,
  • As his Request, tho' much against his Will,
  • To come to _London_--
  • As the Coach stopt, I heard her Voice, more loud
  • Than a great bellied Woman's in a Crowd;
  • Telling the Knight that her Affairs require
  • He, for some Hours, obsequiously retire.
  • I think she was asham'd he shou'd be seen, }
  • Hard Fate of Husbands! the Gallant has been, }
  • Tho' a diseas'd, ill-favour'd Fool, brought in. }
  • Dispatch, says she, the Business you pretend,
  • Your beastly Visit to your drunken Friend.
  • A Bottle ever makes you look so fine;
  • Methinks I long to smell you stink of Wine.
  • Your Country-drinking Breath's enough to kill:
  • Sour Ale corrected with a Lemon-Pill.
  • Prithee, farewel: We'll meet again anon.
  • The necessary Thing bows, and is gone.
  • She flies up Stairs, and all the Haste does show
  • That fifty antick Postures will allow,
  • And then burst out--Dear Madam, am not I
  • The strangest, alter'd Creature: Let me die
  • I find my self ridiculously grown,
  • Embarrast with my being out of Town
  • Rude and untaught like any _Indian_ Queen;
  • My Country Nakedness is plainly seen.
  • How is Love govern'd? Love that rules the State;
  • And pray who are the Men most worn of late?
  • When I was marry'd, Fools were a-la-mode;
  • The Men of Wit were held then incommode.
  • Slow of Belief, and fickle in Desire, }
  • Who, e'er they'll be persuaded, must enquire; }
  • As if they came to spy, and not to admire. }
  • With searching Wisdom, fatal to their Ease,
  • They still find out why, what may, shou'd not please:
  • Nay, take themselves for injur'd, when we dare
  • Make 'em think better of us than we are:
  • And, if we hide our Frailties from their Sights,
  • Call us deceitful Jilts, and Hypocrites:
  • They little guess, who at our Arts are griev'd,
  • The perfect Joy of being well deceiv'd.
  • Inquisitive, as jealous Cuckolds, grow; }
  • Rather than not be knowing, they will know, }
  • What being known, creates their certain Woe. }
  • Women should these, of all Mankind, avoid;
  • For Wonder, by clear Knowledge, is destroy'd.
  • Woman, who is an arrant Bird of Night, }
  • Bold in the dusk, before a Fool's dull sight, }
  • Must fly, when Reason brings the glaring Light. }
  • But the kind easie Fool, apt to admire }
  • Himself, trusts us, his Follies all conspire }
  • To flatter his, and favour our Desire. }
  • Vain of his proper Merit, he, with ease,
  • Believes we love him best, who best can please:
  • On him our gross, dull, common Flatteries pass;
  • Ever most happy when most made an Ass:
  • Heavy to apprehend; tho' all Mankind }
  • Perceive us false, the Fop, himself, is blind. }
  • Who, doating on himself,-- }
  • Thinks every one that sees him of his Mind. }
  • These are true Womens Men--here, forc'd to cease
  • Thro' want of Breath, not will, to hold her Peace;
  • She to the Window runs, where she had spy'd
  • Her much-esteem'd, dear Friend, the Monkey ty'd:
  • With forty Smiles, as many antick Bows,
  • As if't had been the Lady of the House
  • The dirty, chatt'ring Monster she embrac'd;
  • And made it this fine tender Speech at last.
  • Kiss me, thou curious Miniature of Man;
  • How odd thou art, how pretty, how japan:
  • Oh! I could live and die with thee: Then on,
  • For half an Hour, in Complements she ran.
  • I took this Time to think what Nature meant, }
  • When this mixt Thing into the World she sent, }
  • So very wise, yet so impertinent. }
  • One that knows ev'ry Thing that God thought fit
  • Shou'd be an Ass thro' Choice, not want of Wit.
  • Whose Foppery, without the help of Sense,
  • Cou'd ne'er have rose to such an Excellence.
  • Nature's as lame in making a true Fop
  • As a Philosopher, the very Top
  • And Dignity of Folly we attain
  • By studious Search, and Labour of the Brain:
  • By Observation, Counsel, and deep Thought:
  • God never made a Coxcomb worth a Groat.
  • We owe that Name to Industry and Arts;
  • An eminent Fool must be a Fool of Parts.
  • And such a one was she; who had turn'd o'er
  • As many Books as Men; lov'd much, read more:
  • Had discerning Wit; to her was known
  • Every one's Fault, or Merit, but her own.
  • All the good Qualities that ever blest }
  • A Woman so distinguish'd from the rest, }
  • Except Discretion only, she possest. }
  • But now _Mon Cher_, dear Pug, she crys, adieu,
  • And the Discourse broke off, does thus renew:
  • You smile to see me, who the World perchance,
  • Mistakes to have some Wit, so far advance
  • The Interest of Fools, that I approve
  • Their Merit more than Men of Wit in Love.
  • But in our Sex too many Proofs there are
  • Of such whom Wits undo and Fools repair.
  • This, in my Time, was so observ'd a Rule,
  • Hardly a Wench in Town but had her Fool.
  • The meanest, common Slut, who long was grown
  • The Jest and Scorn of ev'ry Pit-Buffoon;
  • Had yet left Charms enough to have subdu'd
  • Some Fop or other; fond to be thought lewd.
  • _Foster_ could make an _Irish_ Lord a _Nokes_;
  • And _Betty Morris_ had her City Cokes.
  • A Woman's ne'er so ruin'd but she can
  • Be still reveng'd on her Undoer, Man:
  • How lost soe'er, she'll find some Lover more,
  • A more abandon'd Fool than she a Whore.
  • That wretched Thing _Corinna_, who has run
  • Thro' all th' several Ways of being undone:
  • Cozen'd at first by Love, and living then
  • By turning the too dear-bought Cheat on Men:
  • Gay were the Hours, and wing'd with Joy they flew,
  • When first the Town her early Beauties knew:
  • Courted, admir'd, and lov'd, with Presents fed;
  • Youth in her Looks, and Pleasure in her Bed:
  • 'Till Fate, or her ill Angel, thought it fit
  • To make her doat upon a Man of Wit:
  • Who found 'twas dull to love above a Day;
  • Made his ill-natur'd Jest, and went away.
  • Now scorn'd of all, forsaken and oppress'd,
  • She's a _Memento Mori_ to the rest:
  • Diseas'd, decay'd, to take up half a Crown
  • Must mortgage her long Scarf, and Manto Gown;
  • Poor Creature, who unheard of, as a Fly,
  • In some dark Hole must all the Winter lie:
  • And Want and Dirt endure a whole half Year,
  • That for one Month she tawdry may appear.
  • In _Easter_ Term she gets her a new Gown;
  • When my young Master's Worship comes to Town:
  • From Pedagogue and Mother just set free;
  • The Heir and Hopes of a great Family:
  • Who with strong Beer and Beef the Country rules;
  • And ever since the Conquest have been Fools:
  • And now with careful Prospect to maintain
  • This Character, lest crossing of the Strain
  • Shou'd mend the Booby-breed; his Friends provide
  • A Cousin of his own to be his Bride:
  • And thus set out--
  • With an Estate, no Wit, and a young Wife:
  • The sole Comforts of a Coxcomb's Life:
  • Dunghil and Pease forsook, he comes to Town,
  • Turns Spark, learns to be lewd, and is undone:
  • Nothing suits worse with Vice than want of Sense:
  • Fools are still wicked at their own Expence.
  • This o'er-grown School-Boy lost _Corinna_ wins;
  • At the first dash to make an Ass begins:
  • Pretends to like a Man that has not known
  • The Vanities or Vices of the Town:
  • Fresh in his Youth, and faithful in his Love,
  • Eager of Joys which he does seldom prove:
  • Healthful and strong, he does no Pains endure,
  • But what the Fair One he adores can cure.
  • Grateful for Favours does the Sex esteem,
  • And libels none for being kind to him.
  • Then of the Lewdness of the Town complains,
  • Rails at the Wits and Atheists, and maintains
  • 'Tis better than good Sense, than Pow'r or Wealth,
  • To have a Blood untainted, Youth and Health.
  • The unbred Puppy who had never seen
  • A Creature look so gay, or talk so fine;
  • Believes, then falls in Love, and then in Debt:
  • Mortgages all, ev'n to the ancient Seat,
  • To buy his Mistress a new House for Life:
  • To give her Plate and Jewels robs his Wife.
  • And when to th' Heighth of Fondness he is grown,
  • 'Tis Time to poison him, and all's her own.
  • Thus meeting in her common Arms his Fate,
  • He leaves her Bastard-Heir to his Estate:
  • And as the Race of such an Owl deserves,
  • His own dull lawful Progeny he starves.
  • Nature (that never made a Thing in vain,
  • But does each Insect to some End ordain)
  • Wisely provokes kind-keeping Fools, no doubt,
  • To patch up Vices Men of Wit wear out.
  • Thus she ran on two Hours, some Grains of Sense
  • Still mixt with Follies of Impertinence.
  • But now 'tis Time I shou'd some Pity show }
  • To _Cloe_, since I cannot chuse but know, }
  • Readers must reap what dullest Writers sow. }
  • By the next Post I will such Stories tell,
  • As, join'd to these, shall to a Volume swell;
  • As true as Heaven, more infamous than Hell:
  • But you are tir'd, and so am I.
  • _Farewel._
  • An EPISTOLARY ESSAY From _M.G._ to _O.B._ Upon their mutual POEMS.
  • Dear Friend,
  • I hear this Town does so abound
  • With saucy Censurers, that Faults are found
  • With what of late we (in poetick Rage)
  • Bestowing threw away on the dull Age.
  • But (howsoe'er Envy their Spleens may raise,
  • To rob my Brows of the deserved Bays)
  • Their Thanks at least I merit; since thro' me
  • They are Partakers of your Poetry:
  • And this is all I'll say in my Defence, }
  • T'obtain one Line of your well-worded Sence, }
  • I'll be content t'have writ the _British_ Prince. }
  • I'm none of those who think themselves inspir'd
  • Nor write with the vain Hope to be admir'd;
  • But from a Rule I have (upon long Trial)
  • T'avoid with Care all sort of Self-denial.
  • Which way soe'er Desire and Fancy lead,
  • (Contemning Fame) that Path I boldly tread;
  • And if exposing what I take for Wit, }
  • To my dear self a Pleasure I beget, }
  • No Matter tho' the cens'ring Criticks fret. }
  • These whom my Muse displeases are at Strife,
  • With equal Spleen against my Course of Life,
  • The least Delight of which I'll not forego,
  • For all the flatt'ring Praise Man can bestow.
  • If I design'd to please, the Way were then
  • To mend my Manners, rather than my Pen:
  • The first's unnatural, therefore unfit; }
  • And for the second, I despair of it, }
  • Since Grace is not so hard to get as Wit. }
  • Perhaps ill Verses ought to be confin'd
  • In meer good Breeding, like unsav'ry Wind,
  • Were reading forc'd, I shou'd be apt to think,
  • Men might no more write scurvily than stink:
  • But 'tis your Choice, whether you'll read, or no.
  • If likewise of your Smelling it were so,
  • I'd fart just as I write, for my own Ease,
  • Nor shou'd you be concern'd unless you please.
  • I'll own that you write better than I do,
  • But I have as much need to write as you.
  • What tho' the Excrements of my dull Brain,
  • Flows in a harsh and an insipid Strain;
  • While your rich Head eases it self of Wit,
  • Must none but Civet Cats have leave to shit?
  • In all I write, shou'd Sense, and Wit, and Rhime
  • Fail me at once, yet something so sublime,
  • Shall stamp my Poem, that the World may see,
  • It cou'd have been produc'd by none but me.
  • And that's my End; for Man can wish no more
  • Than so to write, as none e'er writ before.
  • Yet why am I no Poet of the Times?
  • I have Allusions, Similes, and Rhimes,
  • And Wit; or else 'tis hard that I alone,
  • Of the whole Race of Mankind shou'd have none.
  • Unequally the partial Hand of Heav'n,
  • Has all but this one only Blessing giv'n.
  • The World appears like a great Family,
  • Whose Lord, oppress'd with Pride and Poverty,
  • (That to a few great Bounty he may show)
  • Is fain to starve the num'rous Train below:
  • Just so seems Providence, as poor and vain,
  • Keeping more Creatures than it can maintain:
  • Here 'tis profuse, and there it meanly saves,
  • And for one Prince it makes ten thousand Slaves.
  • In Wit, alone, 't has been Magnificent, }
  • Of which so just a Share to each is sent, }
  • That the most avaricious are content. }
  • For none e'er thought (the due Division's such)
  • His own too little, or his Friends too much.
  • Yet most Men shew, or find, great want of Wit,
  • Writing themselves, or judging what is writ.
  • But I who am of sprightly Vigour full,
  • Look on Mankind, as envious, and dull.
  • Born to my self, I like my self alone;
  • And must conclude my Judgment good, or none:
  • For cou'd my Sense be naught, how shou'd I know
  • Whether another Man's were good or no,
  • Thus I resolve of my own Poetry,
  • That 'tis the best; and there's a Fame for me.
  • If then I'm happy, what does it advance
  • Whether to Merit due, or Arrogance?
  • Oh! but the World will take Offence hereby:
  • Why then the World shall suffer for't, not I.
  • Did e'er this saucy World and I agree,
  • To let it have its beastly Will on me?
  • Why shou'd my prostituted Sense be drawn,
  • To ev'ry Rule their musty Customs spawn?
  • But Men may censure you, 'tis two to one
  • Whene'er they censure they'll be in the wrong.
  • There's not a thing on Earth, that I can name,
  • So foolish, and so false, as common Fame:
  • It calls the Courtier Knave; the plain Man rude;
  • Haughty the Grave; and the Delightful lewd;
  • Impertinent the Brisk; morose the Sad;
  • Mean the Familiar; the Reserv'd one mad.
  • Poor helpless Woman, is not favour'd more,
  • She's a sly Hypocrite, or publick Whore.
  • Then who the Dev'l wou'd give this to be free
  • From th' innocent Reproach of Infamy.
  • These Things consider'd, make me, in despite
  • Of idle Rumour, keep at home and write.
  • THE _Maim'd Debauchee_.
  • I.
  • As some brave Admiral in former War
  • Depriv'd of Force, but prest with Courage still,
  • Two rival Fleets appearing from afar,
  • Crawls to the Top of an adjacent Hill.
  • II.
  • From whence (with Thoughts full of Concern) he views
  • The wise, and daring Conduct, of the Fight:
  • And each bold Action to his Mind renews,
  • His present Glory, and his past Delight.
  • III.
  • From his fierce Eyes flashes of Rage he throws,
  • As from black Clouds when Lightning breaks away,
  • Transported thinks himself amidst his Foes,
  • And absent yet enjoys the bloody Day.
  • IV.
  • So when my Days of Impotence approach,
  • And I'm by Love and Wine's unlucky Chance,
  • Driv'n from the pleasing Billows of Debauch,
  • On the dull Shore of lazy Temperance.
  • V.
  • My Pains at last some Respite shall afford,
  • While I behold the Battels you maintain;
  • When Fleets of Glasses sail around the Board,
  • From whose Broad-sides Vollies of Wit shall rain.
  • VI.
  • Nor shall the Sight of honourable Scars,
  • Which my too forward Valour did procure,
  • Frighten new-listed Soldiers from the Wars,
  • Past Joys have more than paid what I endure.
  • VII.
  • Shou'd some brave Youth (worth being drunk) prove nice,
  • And from his fair Inviter meanly shrink,
  • 'Twould please the Ghost of my departed Vice,
  • If at my Counsel he repent and drink.
  • VIII.
  • Or shou'd some cold complexion'd Sot forbid,
  • With his dull Morals, our Nights brisk Alarms,
  • I'll fire his Blood by telling what I did,
  • When I was strong, and able to bear Arms.
  • IX.
  • I'll tell of Whores attack'd their Lords at home,
  • Bawds Quarters beaten up, and Fortress won;
  • Windows demolish'd, Watches overcome,
  • And handsome Ills by my Contrivance done.
  • X.
  • With Tales like these I will such Heat inspire.
  • As to important Mischief shall incline;
  • I'll make him long some ancient Church to fire,
  • And fear no Lewdness they're call'd to by Wine.
  • XI.
  • Thus Statesman-like I'll saucily impose,
  • And safe from Danger valianly advise;
  • Shelter'd in Impotence urge you to Blows,
  • And being good for nothing else be wise.
  • Upon _NOTHING_.
  • I.
  • _Nothing!_ thou elder Brother ev'n to Shade,
  • Thou hadst a Being e'er the World was made,
  • And (well fix'd) art alone, of ending not afraid.
  • II.
  • E'er Time and Place were, Time and Place were not,
  • When primitive _Nothing_ something straight begot,
  • Then all proceeded from the great united--What.
  • III.
  • Something the gen'ral Attribute of all,
  • Sever'd from thee, it's sole Original,
  • Into thy boundless self must undistinguish'd fall.
  • IV.
  • Yet something did thy mighty Pow'r command,
  • And from thy fruitful Emptiness's Hand,
  • Snatch'd Men, Beasts, Birds, Fire, Air, and Land.
  • V.
  • Matter, the wicked'st Off-spring of thy Race,
  • By Form assisted, flew from thy Embrace,
  • And rebel Light obscur'd thy rev'rend dusky Face.
  • VI.
  • With Form and Matter, Time, and Place did join,
  • Body, thy Foe, with thee did Leagues combine
  • To spoil thy peaceful Realm, and ruin all thy Line.
  • VII.
  • But turn-coat Time assists the Foe in vain,
  • And, brib'd by thee, assists thy short-liv'd Reign.
  • And to thy hungry Womb drives back thy Slaves again.
  • VIII.
  • Tho' Mysteries are barr'd from Laick Eyes,
  • And the Divine alone, with Warrant, pries
  • Into thy Bosom, where the Truth in private lies.
  • IX.
  • Yet this of thee the Wise may freely say,
  • Thou from the Virtuous nothing tak'st away,
  • And to be part with thee the Wicked wisely pray.
  • X.
  • Great Negative, how vainly wou'd the Wise
  • Enquire, define, distinguish, teach, devise?
  • Didst thou not stand to point their dull Philosophies.
  • XI.
  • _Is_, or _is not_, the two great Ends of Fate,
  • And, true or false, the Subject of Debate,
  • That perfect, or destroy, the vast Designs of Fate.
  • XII.
  • When they have rack'd the Politician's Breast,
  • Within thy Bosom most securely rest,
  • And, when reduc'd to thee, are least unsafe and best.
  • XIII.
  • But, _Nothing_, why does _Something_ still permit,
  • That sacred Monarchs should at Council sit,
  • With Persons highly thought at best for nothing fit.
  • XIV.
  • Whilst weighty _Something_ modestly abstains,
  • From Princes Coffers, and from Statesmens Brains,
  • And nothing there like stately _Nothing_ reigns.
  • XV.
  • _Nothing_, who dwell'st with Fools in grave Disguise,
  • For whom they rev'rend Shapes and Forms devise,
  • Lawn Sleeves, and Furs, and Gowns, when they like thee look wise.
  • XVI.
  • _French_ Truth, _Dutch_ Prowess, _British_ Policy,
  • _Hibernian_ Learning, _Scotch_ Civility,
  • _Spaniards_ Dispatch, _Danes_ Wit, are mainly seen in thee.
  • XVII.
  • The Great Man's Gratitude to his best Friend,
  • King's Promises, Whores Vows tow'rds thee they bend,
  • Flow swiftly into thee, and in thee ever end.
  • The ADVICE.
  • All Things submit themselves to your Command,
  • Fair _Cælia_, when it does not Love withstand:
  • The Pow'r it borrows from your Eyes alone;
  • All but the God must yield to, who has none.
  • Were he not blind, such are the Charms you have,
  • He'd quit his Godhead to become your Slave:
  • Be proud to act a mortal Hero's Part,
  • And throw himself for Fame on his own Dart.
  • But Fate has otherwise dispos'd of Things,
  • In different Bands subjected Slaves and Kings:
  • Fetter'd in Forms of Royal State are they,
  • While we enjoy the Freedom to obey.
  • That Fate like you resistless does ordain,
  • To Love, that over Beauty he shall reign.
  • By Harmony the Universe does move,
  • And what is Harmony but mutual Love?
  • Who would resist an Empire so divine,
  • Which universal Nature does enjoin?
  • See gentle Brooks, how quietly they glide,
  • Kissing the rugged Banks on either Side.
  • While in their Crystal Streams at once they show,
  • And with them feed the Flow'rs which they bestow:
  • Tho' rudely throng'd by a too near Embrace,
  • In gentle Murmurs they keep on their Pace
  • To the lov'd Sea; for Streams have their Desires;
  • Cool as they are, they feel Love's powerful Fires;
  • And with such Passion, that if any Force
  • Stop or molest them in their amorous Course;
  • They swell, break down with Rage, and ravage o'er
  • The Banks they kiss'd, and Flow'rs they fed before.
  • Submit then, _Cælia_, e'er you be reduc'd;
  • For Rebels, vanquish'd once, are vilely us'd.
  • Beauty's no more but the dead Soil, which Love
  • Manures, and does by wise Commerce improve:
  • Sailing by Sighs, thro' Seas of Tears, he sends
  • Courtships from foreign Hearts, for your own Ends:
  • Cherish the Trade, for as with _Indians_ we
  • Get Gold and Jewels for our Trumpery:
  • So to each other for their useless Toys,
  • Lovers afford whole Magazines of Joys.
  • But if you're fond of Baubles, be, and starve,
  • Your Guegaw Reputation still preserve:
  • Live upon Modesty and empty Fame,
  • Foregoing Sense for a fantastick Name.
  • The DISCOVERY.
  • _Cælia_, that faithful Servant you disown,
  • Would in Obedience keep his Love his own:
  • But bright Ideas, such as you inspire,
  • We can no more conceal, than not admire.
  • My Heart at home in my own Breast did dwell,
  • Like humble Hermit in a peaceful Cell.
  • Unknown and undisturb'd it rested there,
  • Stranger alike to Hope and to Despair.
  • Now Love with a tumultuous Train invades
  • The sacred Quiet of those hollow'd Shades.
  • His fatal Flames shine out to ev'ry Eye,
  • Like blazing Comets in a Winter Sky.
  • How can my Passion merit your Offence,
  • That challenges so little Recompence?
  • For I am one, born only to admire;
  • Too humble e'er to hope, scarce to desire.
  • A Thing whose Bliss depends upon your Will,
  • Who wou'd be proud you'd deign to use him ill.
  • Then give me leave to glory in my Chain,
  • My fruitless Sighs, and my unpitied Pain.
  • Let me but ever Love, and ever be
  • Th' Example of your Pow'r and Cruelty.
  • Since so much Scorn does in your Breast reside,
  • Be more indulgent to its Mother Pride.
  • Kill all you strike, and trample on their Graves;
  • But own the Fates of your neglected Slaves:
  • When in the Croud yours undistinguish'd lies,
  • You give away the Triumph of your Eyes.
  • Perhaps (obtaining this) you'll think I find
  • More Mercy than your Anger has design'd:
  • But Love has carefully design'd for me,
  • The last Perfection of Misery.
  • For to my State the Hopes of Common Peace,
  • Which ev'ry Wretch enjoys in Death, must cease:
  • My worst of Fates attend me in my Grave,
  • Since, dying, I must be no more your Slave.
  • THE NINTH ELEGY, In the Second Book of _Ovid_'s Amours, translated.
  • _To LOVE._
  • O Love! how cold and slow to take my part?
  • Thou idle Wanderer about my Heart:
  • Why, thy old faithful Soldier, wilt thou see
  • Oppress'd in thy own Tents? They murther me.
  • Thy Flames consume, thy Arrows pierce thy Friends:
  • Rather on Foes pursue more noble Ends.
  • _Achilles_ Sword would certainly bestow
  • A Cure, as certain as it gave the Blow.
  • Hunters, who follow flying Game, give o'er
  • When the Prey's caught, Hopes still lead on before.
  • We thine own Slaves feel thy tyrannick Blows,
  • Whilst thy tame Hand's unmov'd against thy Foes.
  • On Men disarm'd, how can you gallant prove?
  • And I was long ago disarm'd by Love.
  • Millions of dull Men live, and scornful Maids:
  • We'll own Love valiant when he these invades.
  • _Rome_ from each Corner of the wide World snatch'd
  • A Laurel, or't had been to this Day thatch'd.
  • But the old Soldier has his resting Place;
  • And the good batter'd Horse is turn'd to Grass:
  • The harrass'd Whore, who liv'd a Wretch to please,
  • Has leave to be a Bawd, and take her Ease.
  • For me then, who have truly spent my Blood
  • (Love) in thy Service; and so boldly stood
  • In _Cælia_'s Trenches; were't not wisely done,
  • E'en to retire, and live in Peace at home?
  • No--might I gain a Godhead to disclaim
  • My glorious Title to my endless Flame:
  • _Divinity_ with Scorn I wou'd forswear
  • Such sweet, dear, tempting Devils _Women_ are.
  • Whene'er those Flames grow faint, I quickly find
  • A fierce, black Storm pour down upon my Mind:
  • Headlong I'm hurl'd like Horsemen, who, in vain,
  • Their (Fury-flaming) Coursers would restrain.
  • As Ships, just when the Harbour they attain,
  • Are snatch'd by sudden Blasts to Sea again:
  • So Love's fantastick Storms reduce my Heart
  • Half rescu'd, and the God resumes his Dart.
  • Strike here, this undefended Bosom wound,
  • And for so brave a Conquest be renown'd.
  • Shafts fly so fast to me from ev'ry Part,
  • You'll scarce discern the Quiver from my Heart.
  • What Wretch can bear a live-long Night's dull Rest?
  • Fool--is not Sleep the Image of pale Death?
  • There's time for Rest, when Fate hath stopt your Breath.
  • Me may my soft deluding Dear deceive;
  • I'm happy in my Hopes while I believe.
  • Now let her flatter, then as fondly chide:
  • Often may I enjoy; oft be deny'd.
  • With doubtful Steps the God of War does move
  • By the Example, in ambiguous Love.
  • Blown to and fro like Down from thy own Wing;
  • Who knows when Joy or Anguish thou wilt bring:
  • Yet at thy Mother's and thy Slave's Request,
  • Fix an eternal Empire in my Breast:
  • And let th' inconstant, charming, Sex,
  • Whose wilful Scorn does Lovers vex,
  • Submit their Hearts before thy Throne:
  • The Vassal World is then thy own.
  • _Woman's HONOUR._
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • _Love_ bid me hope, and I obey'd;
  • _Phillis_ continu'd still unkind:
  • Then you may e'en despair, he said,
  • In vain I strive to change her Mind.
  • II.
  • _Honour's_ got in, and keeps her Heart;
  • Durst he but venture once abroad,
  • In my own Right I'd take your part,
  • And shew my self a mightier _God_.
  • III.
  • This huffing _Honour_ domineers
  • In Breasts, where he alone has place:
  • But if true gen'rous _Love_ appears,
  • The Hector dares not shew his Face.
  • IV.
  • Let me still languish, and complain,
  • Be most inhumanly deny'd:
  • I have some Pleasure in my Pain,
  • She can have none with all her Pride.
  • V.
  • I fall a Sacrifice to _Love_,
  • She lives a Wretch for _Honour_'s sake;
  • Whose Tyrant does most cruel prove,
  • The Difference is not hard to make.
  • VI.
  • Consider _Real Honour_ then,
  • You'll find _Hers_ cannot be the same,
  • 'Tis noble Confidence in Men,
  • In Women mean mistrustful Shame.
  • _Grecian_ KINDNESS.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • The utmost Grace the _Greeks_ could shew,
  • When to the _Trojans_ they grew kind,
  • Was with their Arms to let 'em go,
  • And leave their lingring Wives behind.
  • They beat the Men, and burnt the Town,
  • Then all the Baggage was their own.
  • II.
  • There the kind Deity of Wine
  • Kiss'd the soft wanton God of Love;
  • This clapt his Wings, that press'd his Vine,
  • And their best Pow'rs united move.
  • While each brave _Greek_ embrac'd his Punk,
  • Lull'd her asleep, and then grew drunk.
  • The MISTRESS.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • An Age in her Embraces past,
  • Would seem a Winter's Day;
  • Where Life and Light with envious haste,
  • Are torn and snatch'd away.
  • II.
  • But, oh! how slowly Minutes roul,
  • When absent from her Eyes;
  • That fed my Love, which is my Soul,
  • It languishes and dies.
  • III.
  • For then no more a Soul but Shade,
  • It mournfully does move;
  • And haunts my Breast, by Absence made
  • The living Tomb of Love.
  • IV.
  • You wiser Men despise me not;
  • Whose Love-sick Fancy raves,
  • On Shades of Souls, and Heav'n knows what;
  • Short Ages live in Graves.
  • V.
  • Whene'er those wounding Eyes, so full
  • Of Sweetness, you did see;
  • Had you not been profoundly dull,
  • You had gone mad like me.
  • VI.
  • Nor censure us, you who perceive
  • My best belov'd and me,
  • Sigh and lament, complain and grieve,
  • You think we disagree.
  • VII.
  • Alas! 'tis sacred Jealousie,
  • Love rais'd to an Extream;
  • The only Proof 'twixt them and me,
  • We love, and do not dream.
  • VIII.
  • Fantastick Fancies fondly move;
  • And in frail Joys believe:
  • Taking false Pleasure for true Love;
  • But Pain can ne'er deceive.
  • IX.
  • Kind jealous Doubts, tormenting Fears,
  • And anxious Cares, when past;
  • Prove our Hearts Treasure fix'd and dear,
  • And make us blest at last.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • Absent from thee I languish still;
  • Then ask me not, When I return?
  • The straying Fool 'twill plainly kill,
  • To wish all Day, all Night to mourn.
  • II.
  • _Dear_, from thine Arms then let me fly,
  • That my fantastick Mind may prove,
  • The Torments it deserves to try,
  • That tears my fix, Heart from my Love.
  • III.
  • When wearied with a World of Woe,
  • To thy safe Bosom I retire,
  • Where Love and Peace and Truth does flow,
  • May I contented there expire.
  • IV.
  • Left once more wandring from that Heav'n,
  • I fall on some base Heart unblest;
  • Faithless to thee, false, unforgiven,
  • And lose my everlasting Rest.
  • To _CORINNA_.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • What cruel Pains _Corinna_ takes,
  • To force that harmless Frown:
  • When not one Charm her Face forsakes,
  • Love cannot lose his own.
  • II.
  • So sweet a Face, so soft a Heart,
  • Such Eyes so very kind,
  • Betray, alas! the silly Art
  • Virtue had ill design'd.
  • III.
  • Poor feeble Tyrant! who in vain
  • Would proudly take upon her,
  • Against kind Nature to maintain
  • Affected Rules of Honour.
  • IV.
  • The Scorn she bears so helpless proves,
  • When I plead Passion to her,
  • That much she fears, (but more she loves,)
  • Her Vassal should undo her.
  • _A young Lady to her ancient Lover._
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • Ancient Person, for whom I
  • All the flatt'ring Youth defie;
  • Long be it e're thou grow old,
  • Aking, shaking, crasie, cold.
  • But still continue as thou art,
  • _Ancient Person of my Heart_.
  • II.
  • On thy withered Lips and dry,
  • Which like barren Furrows lie;
  • Brooding Kisses I will pour,
  • Shall thy youthful Heart restore.
  • Such Kind Show'rs in Autumn fall,
  • And a second Spring recal:
  • Nor from thee will ever part,
  • _Ancient Person of my Heart_.
  • III.
  • Thy nobler Part, which but to name,
  • In our Sex wou'd be counted Shame,
  • By Ages frozen grasp possess'd
  • From their Ice shall be releas'd:
  • And, sooth'd by my reviving Hand,
  • In former Warmth and Vigour stand.
  • All a Lover's Wish can reach,
  • For thy Joy my Love shall teach:
  • And for thy Pleasure shall improve
  • All that Art can add to Love,
  • Yet still I love thee without Art,
  • _Ancient Person of my Heart_.
  • To a LADY: IN A LETTER. A SONG.
  • I.
  • Such perfect Bliss, fair _Chloris_, we
  • In our Enjoyment prove:
  • 'Tis pity restless Jealousie
  • Should mingle with our Love.
  • II.
  • Let us, since Wit has taught us how,
  • Raise Pleasure to the top:
  • You rival Bottle must allow,
  • I'll suffer rival Fop.
  • III.
  • Think not in this that I design
  • A Treason 'gainst Love's Charms,
  • When following the God of Wine,
  • I leave my _Chloris_ Arms.
  • IV.
  • Since you have that, for all your Haste,
  • At which I'll ne'er repine,
  • Its Pleasure can repeat as fast,
  • As I the Joys of Wine.
  • V.
  • There's not a brisk insipid Spark,
  • That flutters in the Town:
  • But with your wanton Eyes you mark
  • Him out to be your own.
  • VI.
  • Nor do you think it worth your Care,
  • How empty, and how dull,
  • The Head of your Admirers are,
  • So that their Veins be full.
  • VII.
  • All this you freely may confess,
  • Yet we ne'er disagree:
  • For did you love your Pleasure less,
  • You were no Match for me.
  • The FALL.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • How blest was the Created State
  • Of Man and Woman e're they fell,
  • Compar'd to our unhappy Fate,
  • We need not fear another Hell!
  • II.
  • Naked, beneath cool Shades, they lay,
  • Enjoyment waited on Desire:
  • Each Member did their Wills obey,
  • Nor could a Wish set Pleasure higher.
  • III.
  • But we, poor Slaves, to Hope and Fear,
  • Are never of our Joys secure;
  • They lessen still, as they draw near,
  • And none but dull Delights endure.
  • IV.
  • Then, _Chloris_, while I Duty pay,
  • The nobler Tribute of my Heart,
  • Be not you so severe to say,
  • You love me for a frailer Part.
  • _LOVE_ and _LIFE_.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • All my past Life is mine no more,
  • The flying Hours are gone:
  • Like transitory Dreams giv'n o'er,
  • Whose Images are kept in store,
  • By Memory alone.
  • II.
  • The Time that is to come is not;
  • How can it then be mine?
  • The present Moment's all my Lot;
  • And that, as fast as it is got,
  • _Phillis_, is only thine.
  • III.
  • Then talk not of Inconstancy,
  • False Hearts, and broken Vows;
  • If I, by Miracle, can be
  • This live long Minute true to thee,
  • 'Tis all that Heav'n allows.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • While on those lovely Looks I gaze,
  • To see a Wretch pursuing;
  • In Raptures of a blest Amaze,
  • His pleasing happy Ruin;
  • 'Tis not for pity that I move;
  • His Fate is to aspiring,
  • Whose Heart, broke with a Load of Love,
  • Dies wishing and admiring.
  • II.
  • But if this Murder you'd forego,
  • Your Slave from Death removing;
  • Let me your Art of Charming know,
  • Or learn you mine of loving.
  • But whether Life, or Death, betide,
  • In Love it's equal Measure,
  • The Victor lives with empty Pride;
  • The Vanquish'd die with Pleasure.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • Love a Woman! you're an Ass,
  • 'Tis a most insipid Passion;
  • To chuse out for your Happiness,
  • The silliest Part of God's Creation.
  • II.
  • Let the Porter, and the Groom,
  • Things design'd for dirty Slaves;
  • Drudge in fair _Aurelia_'s Womb,
  • To get Supplies for Age and Graves.
  • III.
  • Farewel, Woman, I intend,
  • Henceforth, ev'ry Night to sit
  • With my lewd well-natur'd Friend,
  • Drinking to engender Wit.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • To this moment a Rebel, I throw down my Arms,
  • Great _Love_, at first Sight of _Olinda_'s bright Charms:
  • Made proud, and secure by such Forces as these,
  • You may now play the Tyrant as soon as you please.
  • II.
  • When Innocence, Beauty, and Wit do conspire,
  • To betray, and engage, and inflame my Desire,
  • Why should I decline what I cannot avoid,
  • And let pleasing Hope by base Fear be destroy'd?
  • III.
  • Her Innocence cannot contrive to undo me,
  • Her Beauty's inclin'd, or why shou'd it pursue me?
  • And Wit has to Pleasure been ever a Friend,
  • Then what room for Despair since Delight is _Love_'s End.
  • IV.
  • There can be no danger in Sweetness and Youth,
  • Where Love is secur'd by Good-nature and Truth:
  • On her Beauty I'll gaze, and of Pleasure complain;
  • While every kind Look adds a Link to my Chain.
  • V.
  • 'Tis more to maintain, than it was to surprize,
  • But her Wit leads in Triumph the Slave of her Eyes:
  • I beheld, with the Loss of my Freedom before,
  • But hearing, for ever must serve and adore.
  • VI.
  • Too bright is my Goddess, her Temple too weak:
  • Retire, Divine Image! I feel my Heart break.
  • Help, _Love_, I dissolve in a Rapture of Charms;
  • At the thought of those Joys I shou'd meet in her Arms.
  • Upon his leaving his _MISTRESS_.
  • I.
  • 'Tis not that I am weary grown
  • Of being yours, and yours alone:
  • But with what Face can I incline,
  • To damn you to be only mine?
  • You, whom some kinder Pow'r did fashion, }
  • By Merit, and by Inclination, }
  • The Joy at least of a whole Nation. }
  • II.
  • Let meaner Spirits of your Sex,
  • With humble Aims their Thoughts perplex:
  • And boast, if, by their Arts they can
  • Contrive to make _one_ happy Man.
  • While, mov'd by an impartial Sense, }
  • Favours, like Nature you dispense, }
  • With universal Influence. }
  • III.
  • See the kind Seed-receiving Earth,
  • To ev'ry Grain affords a Birth:
  • On her no Show'rs unwelcom fall,
  • Her willing Womb retains 'em all.
  • And shall my _Cælia_ be confin'd? }
  • No, live up to thy mighty Mind; }
  • And be the Mistress of Mankind. }
  • Upon drinking in a BOWL.
  • I.
  • _Vulcan_ contrive me such a Cup
  • As _Nestor_ us'd of old:
  • Shew all thy Skill to trim it up;
  • Damask it round with Gold.
  • II.
  • Make it so large that, fill'd with Sack
  • Up to the swelling Brim,
  • Vast Toasts on the delicious Lake,
  • Like Ships at Sea, may swim.
  • III.
  • Engrave not Battel on his Cheek;
  • With War I've nought to do:
  • I'm none of those that took _Mastrick_,
  • Nor _Yarmouth_ Leaguer knew.
  • IV.
  • Let it no Name of Planets tell,
  • Fixt Stars, or Constellations:
  • For I am no Sir _Sindrophel_,
  • Nor none of his Relations.
  • V.
  • But carve thereon a spreading Vine;
  • Then add two lovely Boys;
  • Their Limbs in amorious Folds intwine,
  • The Type of future Joys.
  • VI.
  • _Cupid_ and _Bacchus_ my Saints are;
  • May Drink and Love still reign:
  • With Wine I wash away my Cares,
  • And then to Love again.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • As _Chloris_ full of harmless Thoughts
  • Beneath a Willow lay,
  • Kind Love a youthful Shepherd brought,
  • To pass the Time away.
  • II.
  • She blusht to be encounter'd so,
  • And chid the amorous Swain:
  • But as she strove to rise and go,
  • He pull'd her down again.
  • III.
  • A sudden Passion seized her Heart,
  • In spight of her Disdain;
  • She found a Pulse in ev'ry Part,
  • And Love in ev'ry Vein.
  • IV.
  • Ah, Youth! (said she) what Charms are these,
  • That conquer and surprize?
  • Ah! let me--for unless you please,
  • I have no Power to rise.
  • V.
  • She fainting spoke, and trembling lay,
  • For fear he should comply
  • Her lovely Eyes her Heart betray,
  • And give her Tongue the Lye.
  • VI.
  • Thus she whom Princes had deny'd,
  • With all their Pomp and Train;
  • Was, in the lucky Minute, try'd,
  • And yielded to a Swain.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • Give me leave to rail at you,
  • I ask nothing but my due;
  • To call you false, and then to say
  • You shall not keep my Heart a Day:
  • But, alas! against my Will,
  • I must be your Captive still.
  • Ah! be kinder then; for I
  • Cannot change, and would not die.
  • II.
  • Kindness has resistless Charms,
  • All besides but weakly move;
  • Fiercest Anger it disarms,
  • And clips the Wings of flying Love.
  • Beauty does the Heart invade,
  • Kindness only can persuade;
  • It gilds the Lover's servile Chain,
  • And makes the Slaves grow pleas'd again.
  • The _ANSWER_.
  • I.
  • Nothing adds to your fond Fire
  • More than Scorn, and cold Disdain:
  • I, to cherish your Desire,
  • Kindness us'd, but 'twas in vain.
  • II.
  • You insisted on your Slave,
  • Humble Love you soon refus'd:
  • Hope not then a Pow'r to have,
  • Which ingloriously you us'd.
  • III.
  • Think not, _Thirsis_, I will e're,
  • By my Love my Empire lose:
  • You grow constant through Dispair,
  • Love return'd you wou'd abuse.
  • IV.
  • Though you still possess my Heart,
  • Scorn and Rigour I must feign:
  • Ah! forgive that only Art,
  • Love has left your Love to gain.
  • V.
  • You that could my Heart subdue,
  • To new Conquests ne'er pretend:
  • Let the Example make me true,
  • And of a conquer'd Foe a Friend.
  • VI.
  • Then, if e'er I should complain
  • Of your Empire, or my Chain,
  • Summon all the powerful Charms,
  • And kill the Rebel in your Arms.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • Fair _Chloris_ in a Pig-Sty lay,
  • Her tender Herd lay by her:
  • She slept, in murmuring Gruntlings they,
  • Complaining of the scorching Day,
  • Her Slumbers thus inspire.
  • II.
  • She dreamt, while she with careful Pains,
  • Her snowy Arms employ'd,
  • In Ivory Pails to fill out Grains,
  • One of her Love-convicted Swains,
  • Thus hastning to her cry'd:
  • III.
  • Fly, Nymph, oh! fly, e're 'tis too late,
  • A dear-lov'd Life to save:
  • Rescue your Bosom Pig from Fate,
  • Who now expires, hung in the Gate
  • That leads to yonder Cave.
  • IV.
  • My self had try'd to set him free,
  • Rather than brought the News:
  • But I am so abhorr'd by thee,
  • That ev'n thy Darling's Life from me,
  • I know thou wou'dst refuse.
  • V.
  • Struck with the News, as quick she flies
  • As Blushes to her Face:
  • Not the bright Lightning from the Skies,
  • Nor Love, shot from her brighter Eyes,
  • Move half so swift a pace.
  • VI.
  • This Plot, it seems, the lustful Slave
  • Had laid against her Honour:
  • Which not one God took care to save,
  • For he persues her to the Cave,
  • And throws himself upon her.
  • VII.
  • Now pierced is her Virgin Zone,
  • She feels the Foe within it;
  • She hears a broken amorous Groan,
  • The panting Lover's fainting Moan,
  • Just in the happy Minute.
  • VIII.
  • Frighted she wakes, and waking sighs,
  • Nature thus kindly eas'd,
  • In Dreams rais'd by her murm'ring Pigs,
  • And her own Th--b between her L--gs,
  • She's innocently pleas'd.
  • CONSTANCY.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • I cannot change, as others do,
  • Though you unjustly scorn:
  • Since that poor Swain that sighs for you,
  • For you alone was born.
  • No, _Phillis_, no, your Heart to move
  • A surer way I'll try:
  • And to revenge my slighted Love,
  • Will still love on, will still love on, and die.
  • II.
  • When, kill'd with Grief, _Amintas_ lies;
  • And you to mind shall call,
  • The Sighs that now unpitied rise,
  • The Tears that vainly fall.
  • That welcome Hour that ends this Smart,
  • Will then begin your Pain;
  • For such a faithful tender Heart
  • Can never break, can never break in vain.
  • A SONG.
  • I.
  • My dear Mistress has a Heart
  • Soft as those kind Looks she gave me,
  • When with Love's resistless Art,
  • And her Eyes, she did enslave me.
  • But her Constancy's so weak,
  • She's so wild, and apt to wander;
  • That my jealous Heart wou'd break,
  • Should we live one Day asunder.
  • II.
  • Melting Joys about her move,
  • Killing Pleasures, wounding Blisses;
  • She can dress her Eyes in Love,
  • And her Lips can arm with Kisses.
  • Angels listen when she speaks,
  • She's my Delight, all Mankind wonder:
  • But my jealous Heart would break,
  • Should we live one Day asunder.
  • _FINIS._
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