THE Folly of Love, A SATYR.
HAppy was Man at first by Nature made,
The welcome guest of
Edens blisful shade;
With awful Reverence every where Ador'd,
And all the Creatures own'd him for their
LORD;
Ev'n the wild Beasts, who have been Rebels since,
Then practis'd
Non-Resistance to their Prince.
When for his pleasure he disposed to rest,
No sawcy Insect durst his sleep molest;
In gentle slumbers undisturb'd he lay
Till
Phoebus usher'd in the new-born day;
[Page 2] Lord of himself, his passions not enslav'd;
He nothing wanted, for he never crav'd.
It hapned on a too too fatal time,
As he did up a Spacious Mountain climb
Of Natures works, a prospect to survey,
A lovely Grove invited him to stay;
Where spreading
Beach and stately
Elm afford
A pleasing shade to the
Creation's Lord:
Hard by, a murm'ring Stream did softly creep,
On whose green Banks he laid him down to sleep:
But whilst in pleasant Dreams intrans'd he lay,
Some Spirit came and stole his Rib away,
And of that
crooked shapeless thing did frame
The
Worlds great Plague, and did it Woman name.
He 'wak'd, with Wonder and Devotion fill'd,
When he her goodly Shape and Form beheld:
With gazing his amazement was increast,
He thought she was some
Goddess at the least:
But when the thing was better understood,
He found she was but only
Flesh and Blood.
Without
Priests Aid he took her for his Bride,
And laid the
smiling Mischief by his side.
[Page 3] Love's solemn Rights not long had been fulfil'd,
But his new Spouse perceiv'd she was with Child;
And tho he strove by all kind arts to please,
Yet all in vain, she could not be at ease,
Until by stealth to save her longing, she
Had tasted of the one forbidden Tree:
The fatal morfel hardly swallow'd down,
She found the angry Face of Heav'n to Frown;
Yet so prevailing was her Malice grown,
She was resolv'd not to be curst alone,
And therefore with insinuating smiles,
Her
too believing Husband soon beguiles:
The baneful Treat soon opens both their Eyes,
To take a prospect of their Miseries;
With melancholly sights they mourn their Fate,
And
Eden with regret they
Abdicate.
From her accursed Loyns have sprung a Race,
The Worlds, their Own, and all Mankinds Disgrace.
Woman! at speaking of the very name,
Nature starts back and hides her self in shame.
Woman! the fatal Authress of our Fall:
Woman! the sure Destroyer of us all,
[Page 4] Like
Sodom's Apples pleasant to the Eye,
Within pale rottenness, and ashes lye;
Their very sight our
youthful Blood enrage,
And prove as fatal to
declining age.
Oh! could we live without that
cloven Sex,
Whose only pleasure's to torment and vex,
Angels from their abodes would downwards fly,
And bless mankind with their society.
Altho but little hopes can ere be had,
To mend what is
incorrigibly bad;
Yet
Satyr thy severest Whip prepare
To lash the sex, so very
vile and
fair.
Be just, spare neither
Quality nor
Age,
From
Girl, just fit for Man, to
Matron sage;
From Dunghill-raker, up to Lady fine,
Dressing all day in Play-house Box to shine;
Recount their various Arts, their subtle Wiles,
Their artful Tears, and their more artful Smiles;
Their numerous Vices, which they Vertue Paint,
And from the
Woman separate the
Saint,
That so unwary, heedless Youth may shun
Those fatal Rocks, where others split upon.
Of all the various seeds of Vice which rest
Within the compass of the
Female Breast;
The first which shews it self in open view
Is
Pride, the earliest sin the Devil knew:
But such success does t' imitation fall,
The Copy far exceeds th' Original.
In
Pride, so quickly they proficient grow,
That Babes the Nipples do not sooner know.
Should any daring Pen attempt to show
What sorts of Dress our Modern Females know,
What antick habits their own
Mothers wore,
And what was us'd an hundred years before,
Their
Fardingales, Stiff-Ruffs, and all the train
Of Fashions us'd in old
Queen Bess's Reign;
Could he describe the Rise and Pedigree
Of Monumental
Top-Knot Gallantry,
Expose their arts (which they esteem no sin)
To mend the Face, and Meliorate the Skin,
Of
Washes, Paints, Perfumes, display their skill,
The bare relation would more Volumes fill,
Than are in
Oxford or the
Vatican,
And reach from thence to
China or
Japan.
[Page 6] Ev'n the raw Country Girl just come to Town
In her
Straw-Hat and
Linsy-Wolsy Gown,
Rather than she
unmodish would appear,
And come to
Church in her plain rusty
Gear,
By Envy and by Inclination led,
Will for new rigging pawn her
Maidenhead,
All on a sudden grows so wondrous pretty,
The City
Mantua hides plain
Country-Betty.
Nay the
Old Madams too, who one would think
Stood tott'ring upon life's extreamest brink;
Those who in spight of Nature will be young,
At
Theat'res and
Churches where they throng,
Are (but with laughter) by the
Gallants seen
Drest and set off like
Girls of
Seventeen.
Lord! with a what uncommon charming Grace,
That fine
Settee becomes a wainscot Face!
How Mother
Shipton looks drest up in Point,
Who, tho her Face with Paint she so anoint,
That like a Joynted Baby she appears,
So sleek, so plump, so ruddy, and so clear,
Yet all can never hide her
Threescore Years.
But so unlimited a vice is
Pride,
That Nature's Faults it does not only hide,
[Page 7] But even as far as serves to cheat the Eye,
Does her Defects as constantly supply.
Imagin now from Play-house just return'd
A Lady, who when there, in fancy burn'd;
Uneasy by some disappointments made,
Preparing to undress her self for Bed;
Her curled Locks (mistaken for her own)
Are in confusion on her Toylet thrown;
Next her Glass Eye put nicely in a Box,
With Ivory Tooth, which never had the
Pox,
Her stiff
Steel-Bodies, which her
Bunch did hide,
Are with her artificial
Buttocks laid aside;
Thus she who did but a small hour ago,
Like
Angel or
Terrestrial Goddess show,
Slides into loathsom sheets, where since we've fixther,
Leave her, of
Pride and
Lust, an equal mixture.
Not all the
Malice joyn'd with all the
Wit,
With which ill natur'd
Poets ever writ,
Could ever yet describe the various kinds
Of Womens boundless
Lusts, which strictly binds
Their Souls and Bodies, so they seem to be
Compos'd of nothing else but
Lechery:
The little Girl who can but write fourteen,
Thinks days are ages till the sport she's seen,
[Page 8] Altho her am'rous Nest is hardly Feather'd,
Altho scarce ripe, yet longs she to be gather'd.
Ev'n they whom
pious Education fools,
Or else are bound by strict
Monastick Rules,
Yet burn with such an inward Lustful Flame,
As all their little Arts can never tame.
Lap-Dogs and D—s serve as much to cure
Their am'rous customary Calenture,
As men in Fevers, when they drink small Beer,
Which makes the Fit return but more severe.
All the endeavours for to quench desire,
Serve only to promote the hidden Fire.
Lust, the first lesson which they always learn
'Ere they the difference of Sex discern;
But that at last by airy notions got,
Is the whole subject of their private chat;
Nay, Bawds half drunk at a young Bastards Christning
More lewdly cannot talk, than I (who listning)
Have heard young Virgins in a corner prattle
About some notions broach't by
Aristotle.
But since the name of
Lust is too severe,
Too harsh and rugged for the Female Ear,
We'll call it
Love, and under that disguise,
Observe their various close Hipocrisies.
By arbitrary Custom, long since curst,
In Love, the Women must not offer first:
They must appear indifferent and cold,
And when the Youth has all his Passions told,
Put on a forc'd Disguise, and gravely say,
What pity Sir, fine words are thrown away!
In other things I'm much at your command,
But not one word of Love I understand;
Yet by her
Eyes, which best the
Soul express,
Her inclinations are not hard to guess.
Suppose a Youth most Fortunately Blest
With all the Charms that ere his Sex possest;
Transform'd by Love into a
whining Fool,
A Womans Play-thing, and a
Chamber-Tool:
If she be Proud, (
as where's the She is not?)
When Prostrate at her Feet she sees the Sot;
With greater Pride the
Turk did never seem,
T' Insult on Prostrate Slaves, than she on him:
She slights his Presents, and neglects his Passion,
And makes his Torments but her Recreation
But yet his Flatteries have this effect,
In punishing her feigned cold neglect;
Her Pride and Lust they so much serve t'inflame,
That she at last in order them to tame,
[Page 10] Her wishes to some
Stallion does impart,
And his
Strong Back must ease her
Am'rous Smart.
— Thus what to
Love and
Merit was deny'd,
Is by the Favourite
Groom or
Footman try'd.
Thus tho the Nymph began t'appear so coy,
Yet lets another tast the hidden Joy;
For the whole Sex agree it shall be sayd,
Nature made Mouths which were not to be Fed;
Sometimes a Crust goes with more Gusto down,
Than all
French Kickshaws and Ragous in Town:
Curst Fate of Women who do always run
In those extreams which most they strove to shun.
But grant her Gen'rous, Affable and Kind,
And not to
Pride or
Tyranny inclin'd;
Easy when Courted, and dispos'd to yield,
And leave
Philander Master of the Field.
Tho the
last favours are allow'd, and he
Proud of a new obtain'd Felicity,
Loves even to a dotage, knows no Heaven but she,
And thinks the Gods not half so blest as he:
Yet in the midst of all his rapt'rous Joys,
Before his Person or Enjoyment Cloys,
She
Jilts him; and to highten his disgrace,
Kisses some new pretender 'fore his Face.
[Page 11] Some little time she's kind to this
new Lover,
But quickly does some cause of change discover:
Weary of him she to another flies,
Swears he's the only person she can prize;
But having him
two days, five hours, three-quarters,
Leaves him
to Hang in Penitential Garters;
Still apt to change, to give their Sex their due,
They scarcely are to their
own wishes true.
They
Love, they
Hate, and yet they know not why,
Constant in nothing but
Inconstancy.
When you of Nature can divert the curse,
And make the Loadstone leave its 'tractive force.
Prove Snow is black, and wash the Negro white,
And make the Sun appear in darkest night:
Fix Quick-silver, and make the Sea stand still,
And cause the Clouds no longer Rain distil;
When this by art you can affect and do,
Then I'll believe a Woman can be true.
But hold, some Female Advocate I hear,
Who blames my Satyr as if too severe.
If some (
says he) are fickle, are there none
Whose Vertues may for others Faults attone?
Who built the great
Mausoleum, which fame
Does one of th' Worlds seven wonders justly name?
[Page 12] But
Artimesa whose true Love was such,
That her own Body was not thought too much
For her dear Husband's Ashes to find room,
And to his Mem'ry did Erect that Tomb;
Nay, in this Vicious Age some few there are,
Behind that Queens Example come not far.
'Tis own'd; but such Examples are as scarce
As five-leg'd Calves, three Moons, or Blazing-Stars.
For when into the World such Monsters creep,
Nature is Retrograde, or half asleep.
Nature, on whom we justly lay the blame,
Which so inclines us for to act our shame.
For after all, how small, alas, the gains
Will be,
Sr.
C. S.
for which we take such mighty pains!
But a short Bliss, a nasty fulsom Joy
Which we regret, e'ne while we yet enjoy;
So trifling, no wise man finds pleasure in it,
'Tis thought begun and finisht in a minute;
And when the eager short liv'd transport's o're,
We lie like Fishes gasping on the shore.
Oh Nature, Nature! rigid are thy Laws,
To which we blindly must submit our Cause.
Who without horrour, or amazement, can
Survey that hideous
Precipice of
Man?
[Page 13] Or with his Pen sufficiently deplore,
That fatal Gulph we call a
Common Whore?
Who can express her Arts of drawing in
Unwary Youths, to the beloved sin?
When caught, with Stratagems she still prepares,
To keep them blindfold in the fatal Snares.
So soon she learnt the
Linnen-lifting Trade,
That she forgets she ever was a Maid:
In Arts obscene so very 'xpert and clear,
The
Devil himself must come to learn of her;
For should all Tricks of Female Lewdness fail,
They all would be reviv'd in
Posture Mall,
The Sexes Harlequin or Scaramouch,
Whose various Scenes of Nakedness are such,
As e'en makes Nature blush.—But hold my Muse,
This Subject will too much thy thoughts abuse:
Let's leave her, who to Lewdness sets no bounds,
The
Lady Abbess of the
Fleetstreet Nuns.
Their Youth with
Claps, and
Lust just worn away,
And all their Charms beginning to decay;
With Mead and Bottle-Beer, they call Cock-Ale,
And some young Cracks, who waiting never fail,
Commence
Grave Bauds and keep a
Vaulting School,
Where
Callow Youths their Health and Mony fool;
[Page 14] While they by Age Venereal Sports forbid,
Yet highly pleas'd to see what once they did.
They live in one continued Scene of Lust,
Till Pox or Gallows turn them into Dust.
Kept Mistresses my Satyr next will find,
A Trade which is but Whoring much refin'd;
A sort of
Jilts, so false and so untrue,
As
Whetstones-Park or
Fleetstreet never knew.
In former times they were content and proud,
With th' usual Pittance which the Spark allow'd,
And took it for a favour seldom known,
If twice a Year was blest with a new Gown;
But now so termigant and haughty grown,
That ere
kind Keeper steps into her Bed,
With Coach and Six she must be furnished;
Have
Settlement and
Joynture made her Honour,
And take such State and Quality upon her;
Sit in the front of the
King's Box at Plays,
And Rival
Lady Dutches to her Face;
Lavish out more in one
Spring-Garden Treat,
Than would provide a First-Rate Ship with Meat.
While
Liberham her Lust can ne're suffice,
But what his unperforming Back denies,
The Footman and the Coachmans
Brawn supplies;
[Page 15] Such Slaves they are to Interest and Gold,
That should a man both Impotent and old,
Worn out with Claps, the Palsy, or the Gout,
By some device find
Bellamira out;
Bid but a
brace of Hundreds more a year,
Yet this old
Lecher will the
Jilt prefer
Before the Youth whose Blood his Passion warms,
And can each Night with Pleasure fill her Arms.
Nothing in
Nature ever was so common,
As
Jilting, Wanton, Prostituted Woman.
Nay, those that do to Vertue most pretend,
Yet seldom are without their
private Friend,
By whom in secret often they'r carest,
For stolen Pleasures often are the best;
Manag'd altho' with greatest privacy,
Yet sometimes get
a tell tale Tympany;
And then the little
Infants cries proclaim
The
Fathers Frolick, and the
Mothers Shame:
But if the
Intreague's so closely carry'd on,
That not the least
Item of the matter's known;
How she will of her Vertue loudly prate,
And blush, yet rightly understand
what's what;
Abroad 'gainst Lewdness how she will exclaim,
Yet daily practice what she does condemn:
[Page 16] If after all the Damsel seeming Chast,
The
Husband-Lover courts her at the last;
With the success he will not be deny'd,
But have this
Modest Virgin for his Bride.
Lord! what a stir is made with
Alum Water,
And such Astringents for to hide the
matter!
That she who knows as much as did her Mother,
May seem amaz'd, and all her Amours smother,
And in his Arms be fearful of a touch:
But hold, of this enough, if not too much.
Of all the Plagues attending human Life,
The greatest sure is that we call a
Wife;
Nor is there a more pitied Wretch than he,
That's doom'd to
Matrimonial Slavery:
Unquiet days and nights with endless noise,
Are the sad consequence of such a choice:
For little did he think what mischiefs lay
In those hard words,
for ever and for aye;
Those holy Words which the sly Clergy use
To cajole People in a fatal noose;
A Charm no after-Magick can unty,
Till both or either opportunely Die.
A
Wife, what is she but a
Wench by Law,
Which tame
Fools Wed to keep themselves in awe?
[Page 17] For sum up all the Curses which befall
Poor man, he that's
Marry'd has 'em all.
If
Jealousy, that Wild-fire of the Brain,
Does once her serious thinking entertain;
Bred by
Suspicion, and by
Fancy Nurst,
No
Tyger ever was so Fierce and Curst.
Abroad she like some
Hellish Fury seems,
At home still haunted by her own vain Dreams;
Unquiet, never with her self at peace,
Till some kind
Rope or
Poyson give her ease,
Fit
Physick for so desp'rate a Disease.
If Appetite to change, or some Disgust,
Addeth some Fuel to her private Lust;
It is resolv'd, nor shall thy Fate,
O Man!
Resist her Vow; for do what ere thou can,
No Bolts, Bars, Locks, can Fetter Inclination,
Thou art a
Cuckold by
Predestination.
(Hard Fate of Custom, that the Faults of
Wife,
Serve to disgrace the
Husband during Life,)
Either of credit, negligent, she cares
Not who her loose Intreagues both sees and hears;
Tho' at Noon-day t'r House the Heroes rush,
And she has long time since forgot to Blush;
Or else by 'pointment in a Dark Alcove,
Design'd for all the stolen sweets of Love;
[Page 18] Meets her Gallant, and opening all her Charms,
Flies eagerly to his desired Arms:
My Dear,
my Love,
my Life,
my Soul
she cries,
(Still mingling every Period with a Kiss.)
How blest am I!
methinks in Thee
I find
All that was made to pleasure Woman-kind.
Lord!
What a Nauseous thing
my Husband
's grown.
Now thou art here, I fancy I
have none:
Thank Fate who this kind meeting did allow,
We'll drink the Cuckold's
Health before we go;
Faith
'tis an honest dull performing Tool,
By Nature fram'd to be a Womans Fool:
But thou my Dear
hast found the only Art,
At once to Conquer and Eenjoy my Heart;
Then smiles: Mean while the
Gallant strives to prove
His Vigour in the brisk
assaults of Love.
Nor is she idle, for some Learned Pen
Assures us, that in those
affairs—
Women are much more active than the Men.
The little God allows the finisht Bliss,
A
Parting Bottle, and a
Parting Kiss;
And when to meet again, for that's the Text,
Each Visit being but
Prologue to the next;
[Page 19] But since to see him, Fortune does deny
His Presence; she by fancy does supply
Her Pleasure, she with so much Art refines,
(A Secret still unknown to vulgar minds,)
That when the Wretch whom she does
Husband name,
Attempts to quench her
everlasting Flame;
Ev'n in the Act of the most kind Embrace,
When
Arms, Legs, Thighs are joyn'd, and
Face to
Face,
By powerful Imagination she,
Her absent
Gallant hugs in
Effegie,
And fancy's her dear
Cuckold-Spouse is he;
While poor
Cornuto humbly drudges on,
Till blest (with what he ne're begat) a
Son;
Then at the
Christning, to compleat the Jest,
The modest
Gallant's chosen from the rest
For
Godfather, pleased with the double Joy,
Of Getting and to Name the little Boy.
Intreaguing is of late so much the Trade,
That she who Travels not that slip'ry Road,
Is laught at by her Sex, as much or more,
As
Cheated Cully is by
Bully-Whore.
Could
Grays-Inn VValks, or those of
Lincolns-Inn,
(Places where Women teach their minds to sin,)
[Page 20] Or
Park, or either
Play-House but relate,
What fine Discourse, what pretty am'rous Chat,
Between the
Gallant and the
VVife is made.
When a new Scene of Pleasure's to be laid,
What strange discoveries would the places make?
More wonderful than those of
Captain Drake;
Monsters he saw, but rarely here and there,
But here whole Droves of
Cuckolds would appear.
The patient, angry, and unthinking one,
Whose Wife's a Jilt, yet he'll believe her none.
Happy's the Man that's handsomly deceiv'd,
VVhose VVife both Swears and Lyes, and is beleiv'd.
Nay, take the best of all these
Clogs of Life,
I mean (if such there be) a vertuous
VVife;
She that with new Indearments ev'ry Night,
Provokes Desire and hightens Appetite:
Her
Female Fondness will destruction prove,
Like
Opium, to the choice delights of Love.
For what we may at any time enjoy,
Does ev'n the relish of the Bliss destroy.
To Pleasure difficulty adds a Gust,
I cannot Love and yet I must be just;
So when to duty, inclination turns,
How faintly th'
Hymenial-Taper burns;
[Page 21] And no Man yet could ever learn the Art,
T' Insure a Womans fickle roving Heart.
That valued thing, her Beauty, may decay,
And Love will wear insensibly away;
And when the occasion of the Passion's fled,
Sure Inclination will be faint or dead;
But if to'r natural Infirmities,
Be added some acute and sharp Disease:
Then
Doctors and
Apothecaries come,
And with their Pots and Glasses fill the room.
Thrice happy he to whom such luck does fall,
T' imbrace Disease, and
VVedd an Hospitall:
All
Swell'd with Sighs and
Blubber'd with her Tears,
A new made
VVidow next in view appears,
Beating her Breast and tearing off her Hair,
She seems the very
Emblem of
Despair.
One would imagin that some mighty matter,
Was meant by all this hideous noise and clatter;
When her whole mourning's but a
perfect Cheat,
For she ne're weeps, but 'tis when others see't.
Alone her Sorrows to her Hopes give place,
She's form'd the project of a new Embrace;
And e're her
Husband in the Grave be laid,
Her Thoughts are of a
Second Bridal-Bed.
[Page 22]
A Maidens Vertue may perhaps be sense,
But who e're heard of Widows continence?
For their frail
Tenements were ne're design'd,
T indure a
Seige so often
Vndermin'd.
If she be
Young her Inclinations speak,
Spite of her Dress of
black Bandore and
Peak;
A
Garb invented for to let us know,
That the late
Tenants Lease is out below;
For Pious Inclinations seldom fail,
To lurk beneath a
Youthful Widows Vail.
Tell me ye
Fortune-Hunters of the Age,
Who with new Faces ev'ry hour engage,
If for one easy
Fond believing
Maid,
Twice fifty
Am'rous Widows have not fled
Into your Arms? for 'tis the
Creed they hold,
One Warm Bedfellow's worth a hundred cold.
The
Worn out Soldier finds an
Hospital;
And
Wither'd Age does for an
Alms-house call.
The
Charter-house for
Gentlemen decay'd,
And
Widows were for Younger
Brothers made.
One in an Age perhaps there may be known,
A
Widow laugh at all the
Fops in Town:
Live like th'
Ephesian Matron all forlorn,
Refuse all Visits all Pretenders Scorn.
[Page 23] Yet there's a time.—But rarely understood,
When
Sorrow gives the Wall to
Flesh and
Blood;
Then if the
Lucky Minute be but known,
Ply your Suit warm, she's certainly your
own.
To these poor Souls perhaps I may be
civil,
But
VVidows Old and Am'rous are the
Devil:
Rather converted into Willow-Switch,
I'd e'ry night be Hagg-rid by a
VVitch,
The greatest curse I rather would prefer,
Than enter into loathed Sheets with her.
As equally offensive to my Arms,
As an old
Maid by Age depriv'd of charms;
For tho' she may be vain and think to please,
Yet
Fifty's an
Incurable Disease.
Oh! with what mighty pleasure
shee'l relate,
(Like
Cavileers the Wars in
forty eight,)
What fine young
Sparks her
humble Servants were,
And how she made them languish with despair▪
But yet her
Vertue was as much above
Their
Flatteries, as they beneath her
Love.
Her Vertue —Dam her with her canting stile,
When 'twas her
Pride preserv'd her all the while;
For let all Women till they'r weary prate,
That
Honour stands as Centry at the Gate:
[Page 24] That Innocence and Vertue are their Crown,
'Tis
Pride, 'tis
Pride that keeps their
Linnen down;
Their peevish Vertue keeps them chast in
spight,
By day their
Guard and
Bugbear all the night:
True Hypocrites, who what they chiefly covet,
Seem most t' abhor and hate it when they love it:
Now nice, then free, now grave, and then more common,
There is no other Riddle but a
Woman.
Oh,
Woman, Woman! who can ere Rehearse,
In lasting Prose, or much more lasting Verse,
What mighty
Mischiefs have by thee been done,
Since angry Nature thee to Frame begun?
Who but an haughty
Cleopatra cost;
Mark Anthony the World? for her 'twas lost.
Who was't the
Roman Capitol Betray'd?
But a perfideous Whore, some call a
Maid?
Who was the cause of a ten long Years War,
When Warlike
Greeks and
Trojans were at Jar,
But
Hellen, stole by
Paris? when he'd dont,
Caus'd a long VVar upon the score of —
For her offended Husband, Swore in rage,
Ten Thousand Lives should ne're his wrath asswage.
There never was a
Plot or close design,
The quiet of a
State to undermine,
Wherein a Woman was not in the Plot;
Let who will lead the
Van, 'tis plain and clear
In
Mischief, Women still bring up the
Rear;
Yet they of Plots,
poor Souls, do know no more,
Than he that Form'd the Project just before.
Thus we've of
Women made a short Survey,
And lightly touch'd their Vices in our way;
But a
Fond Lover with his sensless Muse,
Will all their Frailties and their Faults excuse;
For is his
Mistress ugly beyond thought,
She is his
Queen, his
Goddess, and
what not?
If she with
Moles and
Spots be Larded o're,
He'l tell you
Venus had a Mole before;
He for her
Limping has some pretty hints,
She seems to him to
Languish when she
Squints;
If
Foolish; Lord! how Innocent she is!
Nay, her Malicious Wit is sure to please;
If
Drowsy-look'd, she has the Air of
France;
If
Sluttish, 'tis but
a-la-Negligence;
If
Tawdry and
Ill-drest, she's
Modish thought,
For Love can make a
Venus of a
Slut;
If she Sings worse than a Hoarse
Smithfield-Truli,
To her's, the Musick of the Sphears is dull;
[Page 26] If
VVither'd Old, Age for Respect doth call,
And Bags to make her Young will never fail;
If Lewd as
Cresswell in her youthful days,
Yet to her
Vertue he will Altars raise:
Let the deluded Fool go on, till's greatest curse
Be those few words,
for better and for worse.
Oh! were there but some
Island vast and wide,
Where
Nature's Drest in all her
choicest Pride;
The Air Serene, as Thoughts of
Angels be,
Fertile the Ground, Spontaneous and Free;
Producing all things which we useful call,
As
Edens-Garden did before the
Fall;
Of
Choicest Vines an inexhausted store,
With
Swelling Clusters ready to run o're,
With their own plenty of the
Godlike Juice,
Which seems in
Man a second Soul t' infuse;
There with a Score of
Choice Selected Friends,
Who know no private Interests nor Ends,
We'd Live, and could we Procreate like Trees,
And without
Womans Aid—
Promote and Propogate our
Species;
The Day in Sports and innocent Delight
We'd spend, and in soft
Slumber wast the Night:
[Page 27] Sometimes within a private
Grotto meet,
With gen'rous Wines and Fruits our selves we'd Treat;
Ambition, Envy, and that Meager Train,
Should never interrupt our Peaceful
Raign;
Blest with
Strong-Health, and a most quiet mind,
Each day our
Thoughts should new Diversion find,
But
never, never think on
Woman-kind.
FINIS.