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Female Poems On Several Occasions

Written by Ephelia. The Second Edition, with large Additions

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To the most EXCELLENT PRINCESS MARY, Dutchess of Richmond & Lenox.

As he that Plants a tender Vine, takes care
To shelter it from the cold Northern Aire,
And place it where the Vigour of the Sun
May Cherish it, till it be stronger grown:
So I, that must a blooming Bud expose,
To greater Dangers than the North-wind blows;
Under some happy Shade wou'd have it grow,
Where it secure from Blasts may kindly Blow:
Than Your great Self, none fitter can I find;
For You, to all that need your Help, are kind:
So great your Power is, none will pretend
T'oppress the Smallest thing that You defend:


Your Noble Clemency bids me be Bold,
And lay it at Your Feet, Fear bids me bold;
Asks how I can but hope, that you, who enjoy
Such Mighty Wit, shou'd mind so poor a Toy?
But Fear I'le Banish, Hope shall be my Guide,
And I will Act a Miracle of Pride:
Omit th'Address that all to Greatness use,
And begg you'd Patronize an Infant Muse:
Give leave the front may with your Name be drest,
And then the World will value all the rest.
All know, great Madam, that you do Inherit
Your Noble Fathers far more noble Spirit:
In generosity you've Wonders done,
And Bounty's Prize from all Mankind have won:
Your Face was always Beauty's Standard thought,
Where all Pretenders to be try'd were brought:
Such noble Constancy dwells in your Breast,
Such gen'rous Scorn of Fortune you've exprest,
Ev'n when the greatest of her Ill you've had,
A Fathers fall, as undeserv'd, as sad:
Lost crouds of Noble Friends, a large Estate;
You bravely bore these sad Effects of Fate:
The Noble Richmond, and Great Howard, are
Losses that nothing ever can Repaire:


Such Valiant, Comely, Loyal, Gallant Men,
The Court must never hope to shew agen:
Yet you with Patience these Stroaks sustain.
More Fortitude's in your Heroick Mind,
Than can be shown again by Woman-kind:
Had I a less Soul'd Patron, I shou'd fear
This idle Trifle would offend your Ear:
But Madam, your Indulgence doth extend,
Not only to Encourage, but Defend
Ephelia.

1

A POEM Presented to his SACRED MAJESTY, on the Discovery of the PLOT.

Hail Mighty Prince! whom Heaven has design'd
To be the chief Delight of human kind:
So many Vertues croud your Breast, that we
Do almost question your Mortality:
Sure all the Planets that o're Vertue Reigns,
Shed their best Influence in your Royal Veins:
You are the Glory of Monarchial Pow'rs,
In Bounties free as are descending Show'rs,
Fierce as a Tempest when ingag'd in War,
In Peace more mild than tender Virgins are;

2

In pitying Mercy, you not imitate
The Heavenly Pow'rs, but rather Emulate.
None but your Self, your Suffrings could have born
With so much Greatness, such Heroick Scorn:
When hated Traytors do your Life persue,
And all the World is fill'd with cares for you;
When every Loyal Heart is sunk with Fear,
Your Self alone doth unconcern'd appear;
Your Soul within, still keeps it's lawful State,
Contemns and dares the worst effects of Fate;
As the bright Majesty shot from your Eye,
Aw'd your tame Fate, and rul'd your Destiny.
Though your undaunted Soul bear you thus high,
Your solid Judgment sees there's danger nigh;
Which with such Care and Prudence you prevent,
As if you fear'd not, but would cross th'Event.
Your Care so nobly looks, it doth appear
'Tis for your Subjects, not your Self you fear:
Heaven! make this Princes Life your nearest care,
That does so many of your Vertues share:

3

If Monarchs in their Actions copy you,
This is the nearest piece you ever drew:
Blast every Hand that dares to be so bold,
An impious Weapon 'gainst his Life to hold:
Burst every Heart that dares but think him ill;
Their guilty Souls with so much Terrour fill,
That of themselves they may their Plot unfold,
And live no longer than the Tale is told:
Safe in your Care, all else will needless prove,
Yet keep him safe too in his Subjects love.
Your Subjects view you with such Loyal eyes,
They know not how they may their Treasure prize:
Were you defenceless, they would round you fall,
And Pile their Bodies to build up a Wall.
Were you distress'd, 'twould move a gen'rous strife,
Who first should loose his own, to save your Life.
But since kind Heaven these dangers doth remove,
VVee'l find out other ways t'express our Love.
VVee'l force the Traytors all, their Souls resign,
To Herd with him that taught them their Design.

4

AN ELEGY On the Right Reverend GILBERT SHELDON, Ld Arch-Bishop of Canterbury.

When I heard Sheldon had to Fate resign'd,
A sudden Consternation seiz'd my Mind,
Senseless I stood, the dangerous Surprize
Kept back the Pious Tribute of my Eyes:
And tho no words can e're my Grief express,
Yet by their own, all may judge it's Excess:
For when so good, so great a Prelate falls,
The World must Celebrate his Funerals:
And not a man in the vast Universe,
But sends a Bleeding Heart t'attend his Herse:
To tell his Vertues would whole Volumes ask,
And were a Seraph's, not a Womans task.

5

Over his Flock, so tenderly Austere,
He taught them both at once, to Love and Fear;
So strictly Pious, that to all that knew
His holy life, his Precepts needless grew.
Despis'd Religion did so Beauteous seem
In this blest Saint, it rais'd its first Esteem:
His head, a Receptacle did contain
More Learning than the world can boast again.
He made his Wealth and large Possessions be,
But humble Handmaids to his Charitie;
VVhich was so great, it might be truly said,
That by his Death the Poor were Orphans made:
VVhen ugly Treason flourisht highest, he
Spight of the danger, own'd his Loyalty.
VVith joy he suffer'd for the Church and State,
And bore with ease the weightiest stroaks of Fate.
Stop! stop a while! fierce Rapture choaks my words,
And no expression to my Thoughts affords:
I am all admiration! and as well
Some heavenly Vision, as his Worth might tell.

6

ACROSTICH.

All sev'ral Beauties, Colours, Airs, and Grace,
None ever saw together in one Face:
No? hold a while; I do a Lady know,
Each several Beauty splendidly can show.
But alass! Beauty's but the smallest Grace,
Unless it be i'th' Mind as well as Face:
Rate she is too i'th' Beauties of the Mind;
Young, and yet wise; the wonder of her Kind.

ACROSTICH.

Apollo hence! thy aid I do refuse;
No Nymph will I implore, nor yet no Muse;
No Nectar do I want, to write her praise;
Great Subjects, without help our Fancies raise:
In thy sweet Face such charming Beauties be,
Less we at Angels wonder than at thee:
Brighter than Suns thy lovely Eyes appear,
Each Look doth a Majestick sweetness wear:
Reign Sov'reign Queen of Beauty, Love, and VVit,
Till Death's cold hand shall teach thee to submit.

7

Love's first Approach.

Strephon I saw, and started at the sight,
And interchangably look'd red and white;
I felt my Blood run swiftly to my heart,
And a chill Trembling seize each outward part:
My Breath grew short, my Pulse did quicker beat,
My Heart did heave, as it wou'd change its Seat:
A faint cold Sweat o're all my Body spread,
A giddy Megrim wheel'd about my head:
VVhen for the reason of this change I sought,
I sound my Eyes had all the mischief wrought;
For they my Soul to Strephon had betray'd,
And my weak heart his willing Victim made:
The Traytors, conscious of the Treason
They had committed 'gainst my Reason,
Look'd down with such a bashful guilty Fear,
As made their Fault to every Eye appear.
Tho the first fatal Look too much had done,
The lawless wanderers wou'd still gaze on,

8

Kind Looks repeat, and Glances steal, till they
Had look'd my Liberty and Heart away:
Great Love, I yield; send no more Darts in vain,
I am already fond of my soft Chain;
Proud of my Fetters, so pleas'd with my state,
That I the very Thoughts of Freedom hate.
O Mighty Love! thy Art and Power joyn,
To make his Frozen breast as warm as mine;
But if thou try'st, and can'st not make him kind,
In Love such pleasant, real Sweets I find;
That though attended with Despair it be,
'Tis better still than a wild Liberty.

The Change or Miracle.

VVhat Miracles this childish God has wrought!
Things strange above belief! who wou'd have thought
My Temper cou'd be to this Tameness brought?
I, who the wanton Boy so long defi'd,
And his Fantastick Godhead did deride,
And laugh'd at Lovers with insulting Pride:

9

Now pale and faint, beneath his Altar lie,
Own him a great and glorious Deity,
And want the pitty that I did deny.
For my proud Victor does my Tears neglect,
Smiles at my Sighs, treats me with disrespect,
And if I do complain, with frowns I'm check't.
Though all I sue for, be the empty bliss
Of a kind Look, or at the most a Kiss,
Yet he's so cruel to deny me this.
Before my Passion struck my Reason blind,
Such Generosity dwelt in my mind,
I car'd for none, and yet to all was kind.
But now I tamely bend, and sue in vain,
To one that takes delight t'encrease my pain,
And proudly does Me, and my Love disdain.

10

To a Gentleman that durst not pass the door while I stood there.

SIR,

Passion's force compels me now to write,
And aggravates the wrongs I fain wou'd slight:
They to my Soul in such loud clamours speak,
That Reason to resist them is too weak:
First Rage, or Anger, (call it which you please)
VVhispers my Soul, bear such affronts as these?
Can your great Mind be unconcern'd, when you
VVith your own Eyes did such a passage view?
Can you with Patience hear him say, he dare
Not stir from thence while that sond Fool is there?
Oh! where is all your former Greatness gone?
You in this Act the Stoicks have out done:
He calls you fond, and kind, but let him see
You can disdain such petty things as he:
Thus Anger counsel'd me to do,—but when
I strove to obey her Dictats, ah! then

11

Something like Pitty in your Cause did plead,
And my faint Anger did in Triumph lead:
Shame pleaded next, and mildly did request,
She might not quite be exil'd from my brest,
VVhich she must be, if I shou'd entertain
But the least Thought of loving you again;
For when first notice of the words I took,
Such heat and blood into my Face it struck,
My self cou'd hardly tell for what it came,
VVhether I blush'd for Anger or for Shame:
But when your face I saw, I straight grew cold,
I started, trembl'd, and my Eye-balls roul'd:
The breath I had scarce serv'd me to retire,
E're in a Swound I gently did expire.
But my high Thoughts, and too too gen'rous Flame,
Scorn'd to be curbed by a needless Shame:
Hate pleaded next, fiercer than all the rest,
And yet a greater stranger to my brest;
For my calme brest, till now was ne're the Seat
Of Surly Passion, or unruly Heat,

12

Hate urg'd, each Action look'd as done in scorn,
Then asked if I to bear affronts was born:
This and much more She said, but all in vain,
Ill thoughts of you I ne're cou'd entertain;
Your great Affronts, I witty Jests did think,
And at coy Looks would turn my head, or wink:
Nay, when you gave such proofs of your Disdain,
That I must see't, I gav't another Name;
I only thought you saw me go astray,
And generously put me in my way.
How strangely is my Life perplex'd by fate!
I wou'd not Love, and yet I cannot hate.

First farewel to J. G.

Farewel my dearer half, joy of my heart,
Heaven only knows how loth I am to part:
VVhole Months but hours seem, when you are here,
VVhen absent, every Minute is a Year:
Might I but always see thy charming Face,
I'de live on Racks, and wish no easier place.

13

But we must part, your Interest says we must;
Fate, me no longer with such Treasure trust.
I wou'd not tax you with Inconstancy,
Yet Strephon, you are not so kind as I:
No Interest, no nor Fate it self has pow'r
To tempt me from the Idol I adore:
But since you needs will go, may Africk be,
Kinder to you, than Europe is to me:
May all you meet and every thing you view
Give you such Transport as I met in you.
May no sad thoughts disturb your quiet mind,
Except you'l think of her you left behind.

14

To Mr. J. G. on his being chosen Steward of his Club, presented with the Laurel.

Sir, by your Merit led, to you I bring
A Laurel-wreath, but 'tis too mean a thing
For your high VVorth and Parts, which we
In vain wou'd Blazon by such Herauldry:
For Laurel, Palme, and Olive, may set forth
Our Love to you, but not express your worth;
VVhich doth exceed these humble types, as far
As Titans Rays out shine a twinkling Star:
I'le say no more, lest while I make You best,
I seem Injurious to all the rest
Of this fair Company, who do all by me
Chuse you their Steward, and unanimously
Intreat your care, to make their Club to be
For Honour and Grandure, The Society.

15

To J. G. in absence.

Dear Object of my Love! didst thou but know
The Tortures, that I daily undergo
For thy dear sake, thou sure woud'st be so kind,
To weep the Troubles that invade my mind;
I need not tell thee that I dearly love,
No, all my Actions will my Passion prove:
For thee I've left the wise, the great, the good,
And on my Vows, not my Preferment stood.
Think then, dear Strephon, how unkind thou art,
To prove the Torturer of that tender heart,
That chose thee out to be its chief Delight,
And knows no real Joy but in thy sight.
Since first thy Courtship me to Love inclin'd,
Thou ne're hast been one hour out of my mind.
How tedious then must thy long absence be
To her, that wishes nothing else to see,
And lives not, but when in thy Company?
Haste then dear Love! for if thou longer stay,
My Griefs will make me sigh my Soul away.

16

Prologue to the Pair-Royal of Coxcombs, Acted at a Dancing-School.

Gallants,

If, as you say, you Love Varietie,
VVe have some hopes, that you so kind will be
To the poor Play, to give it your Applause,
Though not for Wit, nor Worth, but yet because
A Woman wrote it; though it be not rare,
It is not common. VVomen seldom dare
To reach so high, to entertain your Ears,
VVhich strikes our Poets with a thousand fears
Of your displeasure; yet some little Ray
Of hope is left; for womens Pardons may
Be gain'd with ease surely from Gentlemen;
Be kind for once then to a Female Pen.
VVhen you with women in discourse do sit,
Before their Faces you'l commend their wit,
Pray flatter now, the Poet heareth it:
She hopes too, the great Wits, who croud the Age,
Censure the Poets, and undo the Stage,

17

Won't undervalue so their mighty Wit,
To Criticize on what a Woman writ:
Yet if you'l have it so, it shall be Naught,
They that dislike, are welcome to find Fault;
For She protests, She had no other ends
In writing this, than to divert her Friends:
Like, or dislike, She's careless, bid me say,
That you shou'd Censure only when you Pay:
True, they must fawn, that write for a Third day.
She scornes such Baseness, therefore will not sue:
But yet, bright Ladies, does submit to you;
Your Smiles may cherish, what their Frowns wou'd blast,
Then when they Hiss, be pleas'd to Clap more fast:
She knows your Judgments are too clear, and high
To be Deceiv'd, but knows no Reason why
You may not Pardon all the Faults you spy.
Be kind then Ladies to this trifling Play,
Her Wit is now i'th' Bud, when blown, She may
Present you with a better; till It come,
This, Ladies, humbly begs a gentle Doom.

18

The first Song in the Play.

Begone fond Love, make haste away,
Duty, not thee, our Souls must sway:
Can thy Almighty Pow'rs
Find out no other Hearts,
To Shoot thy Fatal Darts,
But hapless Ours,
VVho cannot, though we wou'd, Obey?
What secret Pow'r is it, Controuls
The Empire thou pretend'st o're Souls?
That still thy shafts are lost,
And still thou Shoot'st in vain,
For they that feel most Pain,
By Duty 're Crost,
Or else unjustly meet Disdain.

19

Fondly Men say, the VVorld doth move
By Loves Command; for simple Love,
Alass! is Subject unto Fate:
Oh Love! Assert thy Pow'r,
And make the Dotards, in an hour
Our Faces hate,
And the young Knights like Swans or Turtles prove.

The Second Song.

Come quickly Death,
And with thy fatal Dart,
Release that Heart
That hath too long been thy great Rivals Slave:
Oh! stop that Breath
I languish out in pain;
Let me not Sigh in vain,
But quick and gently send me to my Grave.

20

For since that Swain
That I so dearly prize,
Doth scorn my Sighs,
And break those Sacred Vows to me he gave;
I'le not complain of Mans Inconstancie,
But humbly Beg of thee, with speed and ease,
To send me to my Grave.
And Love I'le still
Adore thy Deity;
And Worship thee?
If to my alter'd Shepherd thou'lt Relate,
Since 'twas his will, I should not call him mine,
I freely can Resign, and Die for him,
And glory in my Fate.

21

Epilogue.

[The Play is damn'd; well, That we look'd to hear]

The Play is damn'd; well, That we look'd to hear,
Yet Gentlemen, pray be not too severe.
Though now the Poet at your Mercy lies,
Fates wheel may turn, and she may chance to rise.
Though she's an humble Suppliant now to you,
Yet time may come, that you to her may Sue.
Pardon small Errors, be not too unkind,
For if you be, she'l keep it in her mind;
The self same usage that you give her Play,
She'l copy back to you another day.
If you her Wit, or Plot, or Fancy blame,
VVhen you Addresses make, She'l do the same;
But if you'l Clap the Play, and Praise the Rime,
She'l do as much for you another time.

22

Welcome to J. G.

Those that can tell Heaven's Joy, when News is brought
That some Poor Sinners dear Conversion's wrought,
Might tell our Raptur'd Extasies, when we
Receiv'd the News, that you were come from Sea:
Each wore such Looks, as visibly exprest
Some more than common Joy, sate smiling in his Brest:
Great as your Friend's Joys, you will nothing find,
Unless the Grief of those you left behind:
I can describe my Joy for your Return
No more, then tell how I your Absence Mourn:
Both are beyond the reach of words t'express,
And to describe them, wou'd but make them less:
The Blessing of young Heirs is mixt with Pain,
And by their Father's Deaths, Princes their Empires gain
If then all pleasure, meets with some allay,
Forgive me, Dearest Strephon, if I say,
I almost Grieve to think that thou canst be
Six days in London, e're thou Visit me.

23

Wealth's Power.

How Happy was the VVorld before men found
Those metals, Nature hid beneath the Ground!
All Necessary things She plac'd in View,
But this She wisely hid, because She knew
That it destructive to her work wou'd be,
And jarr the consort of her Harmony:
No sooner Steel was Found, but men began
To find new ways to Death, and cruel man
Made Swords, and Spears, and Bows, and Darts, which he
First use'd on Beast ------
VVho fell the Victimes of his Cruelty:
Pride, and Revenge, then Rag'd in every Soul,
And Fiery Passion, Reason did controule.
But when those Mines we're found which we call rich,
Because their Glitt'ring Beauty did bewitch
And please our cousen'd Senses, then with more
Than mean devotion, man did Gold adore:

24

Deluded man did then this Trifle call
The chiefest Good, that cou'd to him befall:
How strangely, Frantick man, didst thou mistake,
When of this trash thou didst an Idol make?
For tho to it thou did'st no Altars rear,
Its Zealous Votary thou didst appear:
This fatal Poyson was by Heaven hid
I'th bowels of the earth, and when it did
By chance, i'th' Hesperian Garden shoot above,
Heaven, (knowing how mischievous it wou'd prove)
The passage did with watchful Dragons guard,
And made the way to misery, more hard
To pass, than that which lead to Bliss:
But all in vain, for had Heaven hidden this
I'th'Verge of Hell, man wou'd have fetcht it thence,
And thought it a sufficient Recompence
For all his pains; but when he had attain'd,
This much desired Curse, he thought he'd gain'd
A Blessing Heav'n wou'd Envy, blut alas!
The worth, not in the Metal, but his Fancy was.

25

No Man did needless Merit now regard,
None Vertue sought, none Valour wou'd reward,
None Learning valu'd, none poor Wit did mind,
None honour'd Age, few were to Beauty kind;
All Gold ador'd, all Riches did Admire,
Beyond being Rich, no Man did now aspire.
Gold thus Advanc'd, and all things else neglected,
Justice depos'd, and Wisdom disrespected;
They left the Earth to Wealth's more pow'rful sway,
And fled to Heaven, while Man did Gold obey:
Now Money reign'd in chief, and sottish Man,
A slavish servitude to Wealth began;
Kingdomes to Rule, and Princes to Advise,
Men fondly chose the Rich, and not the Wise;
All lov'd the Man that had a good Estate,
And Poverty was cause enough to Hate;
The Rich might all things do, and Plaudits have
For his worst Acts, but scarce the Poor cou'd save
His best from Censure; now it might be said,
Wealth hid more Faults, than ever Folly made.

26

A Friend, though heretofore a Sacred Name,
Now, nothing but an empty Sound became;
For as Mens Riches did or Ebb, or Flow,
So less or more, their Friends did kindness show:
Honour, that flew such noble Flights before,
VVith gen'rous Pinions, now no more cou'd soare
Such Hights, but check'd, to stoop did not disdain
T'a gilded Lure, and ware a Golden Chain:
Beauty, that all Men did for Heavenly hold,
Forgot its worth, and sold its self for Gold:
Nay Love, though more Divine than all the rest,
Became a Mercenary, or at best,
A mingled Compound of desire and wealth,
If any's better, 't must be had by Stealth:
Marriage is Love and Joynture mixt together,
And yet sometimes it happens that there's neither:
But VVit this glorious trifle did disdain,
VVealth strove to make it yield, but all in vain,
More noble Objects gen'rous VVit did chuse
To employ its Thoughts, and did this Trash refuse.

27

VVealth threatn'd VVit it ever shou'd be Poor,
Yet VVit the Golden Calf wou'd not adore;
So when both saw their Labour was in vain,
They vow'd to part, and never meet again.

Song.

[Ranging the Plain, one Summers Night]

1

Ranging the Plain, one Summers Night,
To pass a vacant hour,
I fortunately chanc'd to light
On lovely Phillis bow'r:
The Nymph adorn'd with Thousand Charms
In expectation sate,
To meet such joys in Strephon's Armes,
As Tongue can ne're Relate

2

Upon her hand She lean'd her Head,
Her Breasts did gently rise,
And every Lover might have read
Her wishes in her Eyes;

28

With every breath that mov'd the Trees,
She suddainly wou'd Start,
A Cold on all her Body seiz'd,
A Trembling on her Heart.

3

But He that knew how well she Lov'd,
Beyond his Hour had staid,
Which both with Fear and Anger mov'd,
The Melancholick Maid.
You Gods she said! how oft he Swore,
He wou'd be hear by One;
And now, alas! 'Tis Six and more,
And yet He is not come.

29

Loves Cruelty, or the Prayer.

Speak cruel Love! what is't thou dost intend?
Oh! tell me, have thy Tyrannies no end?
Tho to thy Pow'r I have a Rebel bin,
May not Repentance expiate my Sin?
Oh! long e're this, if I had injur'd Heaven;
So true a Convert it wou'd have forgiven:
Four times the Sun his Yearly Race hath run,
Since first my Heart was by my Eyes undone;
In all which time, thou scarce hast been so kind,
To give one Minutes Quiet to my mind;
Thou takest from me the Rellish of Delights,
My Days no Pleasure know, no Sleep my Nights:
With wandring thoughts each Pray'r thou dost prophane,
(I offer to my God) and mak'st them vain.
Sometimes with Books I wou'd divert my mind,
But nothing there but J's and G's I find:
Sometimes to ease my Grief, my Pen I take,
But it no Letters but J G will make.

30

I seek Diversion in Company,
But my discourse great Love, is all of Thee;
In Sighs and Sobs, I Languish out the Night
And all the day, in Tears I drown my Sight:
Yet I no pity can from thee obtain,
Thou'lt neither Cure, nor mitigate my Pain:
Mercyless Tyrant! Since thou wilt not Save,
Quickly Destroy, and send me to my Grave.

The Reply, by a Friend.

What Pray'r incessant, to my Ears does fly?
What proud Presumption me of Tyranny
Accuseth? can Love whose pow're is so Great,
Be taxed with Ingratitude, or Hate?
Fond Girle forbear, and know that your Dispair
Is want of Courage, cou'd you once but dare
Your Victor, and my Vassal, you shou'd see,
How Heav'n wou'd punish his inconstancy:
But while your Hope on his fond Vows relies,
And thinks Heaven minds those little Perjuries,

31

You quit the greater Pow'r, that you may claime
By Beauty's Conquest, the loss of it's your Shame:
When first to you he his Addresses made,
Smiles gave him Life, your frowns, strike him Dead;
But Viper like, being in your Bosom warm'd,
And his chill'd Soul being into Action charm'd
By th'Influence of your Beams, he straight denies
What gave his Love a Life, and from it flies;
From such a Rebel, as from Plagues i'de run;
'Twixt Love and Hate, is no comparison:
Nor is he worth your Anger, or your Scorn,
Do but forget that ever he was Born:
You can't believe the Gods would e're create
Ingratitude, that Quintessence of Hate.
Think him a Spectrum, that had only Shape
Without Substance, and Love did onely Ape,
Then reassume that Pow'r, that Nature's Law
Gives to your Sex; be Wise, keep Slaves in Awe:
Be generous in Love, Love not in vain,
'Tis base to Love, where we're not Lov'd again.

32

To J. G.

Tell me you Hate; and Flatter me no more:
By Heaven I do not wish you shou'd adore;
With humbler Blessings, I content can be,
I only beg, that you would pity me;
In as much Silence as I first design'd,
To bear the Raging Torture of my Mind;
For when your Eyes first made my Heart your Slave,
I thought t'have hid my Fetters in my Grave:
Heaven witness for me, that I strove to hide
My violent Love, and my fond Eyes did chide
For glancing at thee; and my Blushes hid,
With as much care as ever Virgin did.
And though I languish'd in the greatest pain
That e're despairing Lover did sustain;
I ne're in publick did let fall a Tear,
Nor breath'd a Sigh i'th' reach of any Ear:

33

Yet I in private, drew no Breath but Sighs,
And Show'rs of Tears fell from my wretched Eyes:
The Lillies left my Front, the Rose my Cheeks,
My Nights were spent in Sobs and suddain Shreeks,
I felt my strength Insensibly decay'd,
And Death aproach; but ah! then you convey'd
Soft Am'rous tales into my listning Ears,
And gentle Vows, and well becoming Tears,
Then deeper Oaths, nor e're your Seige remov'd
'Till I confest my Flame, and own'd I lov'd:
Your kinder Smiles had rais'd my Flames so high,
That all at Distance might the Fire Discry,
I took no care my Passion to suppress,
Nor hide the Love I thought I did possess:
But ah! too late I find, your Love was such
As Gallants pay in course, or scarce so much:
You Shun my sight, you feed me with delays,
You slight, affront, a Thousand several ways
You doe Torment with Study'd Cruelty,
And yet alternately you Flatter me.

34

Oh! if you Love not, plainly say you hate,
And give my Miseries a shorter date,
'Tis kinder than to Linger out my Fate;
And yet I cou'd with less regret have Dy'd,
A Victime to your Coldness, than your Pride.

Song.

[Beneath a spreading Willows shade]

1

Beneath a spreading Willows shade,
Ephelia, a harmless Maide,
Sate rifling Natures store
Of every Sweet, with which she made
A Garland for her Strephons Head
As Gay as ever Shepherd wore.

2

She seem'd to know no other Care,
But wether Pinks, or Roses there,
Or Lillys look'd most sweet,

35

Scarce thinking on her Faithless Swain,
VVho Ranging on the neighb'ring Plain,
A wanton Shepherdess did meet.

3

But by Mischance, he led her near
Th'Unlucky, Fatal Willow, where
His kind Ephelia sate;
He told the Kindness that she show'd,
Boasted the Favours she bestow'd,
And glory'd that he was ingrate.

4

The Angry Nymph, did rudely tare
Her Garland first, and then her Hair,
To hear her Self abus'd:
Oh Love! (she said) is it the Fate
Of all that Love, to meet with Hate,
And be like me, unkindly us'd?

36

To my Rival.

Since you dare Brave me, with a Rivals Name,
You shall prevail, and I will quit my Claime:
For know, proud Maid, I Scorn to call him mine,
Whome thou durst ever hope to have made thine:
Yet I confess, I lov'd him once so well,
His presence was my Heav'n, his absence Hell:
With gen'rous excellence I fill'd his Brest,
And in sweet Beauteous Forms his Person drest;
For him I did Heaven, and its Pow'r despise,
And onely liv'd by th'Influence of his Eyes:
I fear'd not Rivals, for I thought that he
That was possess'd of such a Prize as me,
All meaner Objects wou'd Contemn, and Slight,
Nor let an abject thing Usurpe my Right:
But when I heard he was so wretched Base
To pay devotion to thy wrinkled Face
I Banisht him my sight, and told the Slave,
He had no Worth, but what my Fancy gave:

37

'Twas I that rais'd him to this Glorious State,
And can as easily Annihilate:
But let him live, Branded with Guilt, and Shame,
And Shrink into the Shade from whence he came;
His Punishment shall be, the Loss of Me,
And be Augmented, by his gaining Thee.

Neglect Returned.

1

Proud Strephon! doe not think my Heart
So absolute a Slave:
Nor in so mean a servile state,
But if I say that you're Ingrate,
I've Pride, and Pow'r, enough, my Chains to Brave.

2

I Scorn to Grieve, or Sigh for one,
That does my Tears Neglect;
If in your Looks you Coldness wear,
Or a desire of Change Appear,
I can your Vows, your Love, and you Reject.

38

3

What refin'd Madness wou'd it be,
VVith Tears to dim those Eyes,
VVhose Rays, if Grief do not Rebate,
Each hour new Lovers might Create,
And with each Look, gain a more glorious Prize!

4

Then do not think with Frowns to Fright,
O Threaten me with Hate,
For I can be as cold as you,
Disdain as much, as proudly too,
And break my Chain in spight of Love or Fate.

On a Bashful Shepherd.

1

Young Clovis, by a lucky Chance,
His Lov'd Ephelia spy'd,
In such a place, as might advance
His Courage, and abate her Pride:

39

VVith Eyes that might have told his Sute,
Although his bashful Tongue was mute,
Upon her gazed he,
But the Coy Nymph, though in Surprize,
Upon the Ground fixing her Eyes,
The Language wou'd not see.

2

VVith gentle Grasps he woo'd her Hand,
And sigh'd in seeming Pain,
But this she wou'd not understand,
His Signs were all in vain:
Then change of Blushes next he try'd,
And gave his Hand freedom to slide
Upon her panting Brest;
Finding she did not this controul,
Unto her Lips he gently stole,
And bid her guess the rest.

3

She blush'd, and turn'd her Head aside,
And so much Anger feign'd,
That the poor Shepherd almost Dy'd,

40

And she no Breath retain'd:
Her killing Frown so chill'd his Blood,
He like a senseless Statue stood,
Nor further durst he Woe,
And tho his Blessing was so near,
Check'd by his Modesty and Fear,
He faintly let it goe.

Maidenhead:

Written at the Request of a Friend.

At your Intreaty, I at last have writ
This whimsey, that has nigh nonplust my wit:
The Toy I've long enjoyed, if it may
Be call'd t'Enjoy, a thing we wish away;
But yet no more its Character can give,
Than tell the Minutes that I have to Live:
'Tis a fantastick Ill, a loath'd Disease,
That can no Sex, no Age, no Person please:
Men strive to gain it, but the way they chuse
T'obtain their Wish, that and the Wish doth lose;

41

Our Thoughts are still uneasie, till we know
What 'tis, and why it is desired so:
But th'first unhappy Knowledge that we boast,
Is that we know, the valu'd Trifle's lost:
Thou dull Companion of our active Years,
That chill'st our warm Blood with thy frozen Fears:
How is it likely thou shou'dst long endure,
When Thought it self thy Ruin may procure?
Thou short liv'd Tyrant, that Usurp'st a Sway
O're Woman-kind, though none thy Pow'r obey,
Except th'Ill-natur'd, Ugly, Peevish, Proud,
And these indeed, thy Praises Sing aloud:
But what's the Reason they Obey so well?
Because they want the Power to Rebell:
But I forget, or have my Subject lost:
Alass! thy Being's Fancy at the most:
Though much desired, 'tis but seldom Men
Court the vain Blessing from a Womans Pen.

42

The Reconcilement.

If you Repent, can I forgive your Crime,
Except you Love again, and call you Mine:
What Question's this? Ask some poor Slave if he
Will take again his former Liberty:
Some greedy Miser ask, that Gold had lost
If hee'l Receiv't again: one that is tost
In a feirce Tempest, on the raging Main,
Ask if he wou'd be safe on Land again:
Ask the Diseased, if they wou'd be Well
Or ask the Damn'd, if they wou'd leave their Hell:
But ask not me a Question So Vain,
As, can you take my wandring Heart again.
No Conqu'ring Hero e're did Foes persue
VVith half the Pleasure, that I took in you;
No Youthful Monarch, of a Glit'ring Crown,
Or prating Coxcomb, of a Scarlet Gown
VVas half so proud, as I was of your Love;
Nor cou'd great Juno's State my Envy move,

43

VVhile in your Heart I thought I Reigned in chief.
Then Strephon, think, how killing was the Grief
That I sustain'd, to find my Empire lost,
And servile Mopsa of your Conquest boast:
None but a depos'd Monarch, made a Scorn
By the rude Slaves that were his Vassals born,
VVho while th'Imperial Circle grace'd his Brow,
At awfull distance, to his Feet did bow,
His Scepter snatch'd by an unworthy hand,
That late was proud to wait his least command,
But now th'Insulting wretch dares threat the Head
Of him, whose Frown but late cou'd look him dead,
Cou'd guess the horrid Tortures seiz'd my mind,
VVhen I perceiv'd you were to Mopsa kind:
That ill-look't Hag! who nere had guilty bin,
(No not in thought) of such a dareing Sin,
Had you not broke the Solemne Faith you vow'd,
Made me a Scorn to the Ignoble Crow'd
Of vulgar Nymphs, who now dáre loudly prate
Reviling tales, they durst not think of late.

44

I did almost to Death this usage Mourn,
Yet 'tis forgot i'th' Joy of your Return;
Your proofs of Penitence shall be but small,
Look kind on me, and not on her at all.

Song.

[Obscure the Glories of your Eyes]

1

Obscure the Glories of your Eyes,
Or give us leave to Love:
To see, and not desire that Prize,
Impossible must prove:
Look not so nicely on your Slave,
That at your Feet doth bow,
When such enticeing Looks you gave,
To tempt the Fool so low.

2

Coy wanton Nymph, though you forbid
Your Slaves to seek Redress,
And force us keep our Torture hid,
Your Guilt is ne're the less.

45

It cannnot sure be Pity found,
But barb'rous Cruelty,
VVhen you with Pleasure give a VVound
So deep, you start to see.

To a Lady who (tho Married) could not endure Love should be made to any but her Self.

Say, jealous Phillida, what Humour's this?
No Shepherd can bestow a Smile or Kiss
On any Nymph, but you must pout and vex:
Wou'd you Monopolize the Masc'line Sex?
Is not the sprightly Damon's heart Your Prize,
Securely bound by Hymens Sacred ties?
Strephon and Colon, your Adorers are,
And bashful Cleon does your Fetters wear:
Young Coridon did by your Beauty fall;
Insatiate Nymph! wou'd you ingross them All?
Who doth not smile, to see what Pains you take
To watch our private Meetings, and to make

46

Our Amours publick? and if your list'ning Ear
By chance soft Amorous Discourses hear,
Then raging Mad: with Jealousie and Pride,
You curse the Shepherds, and the Nymphs you chide.
But why thus Angry? if we entertain
The Heart and Love of some poor humble Swain,
VVho never his cheap Thoughts so high durst lift,
As to present you with so mean a Gift;
What wrong have you? why shou'd you break your Rest,
If they to us present a Linnets Nest,
A Wreath of Flowers, or a Bunch of Grapes,
Filberts, or Strawberries, or the Roots of Rapes?
When Lambs and Kids, are daily offer'd you
By the great Swains, that for your favour sue;
If any Shepherdess so bold dare be,
T'invade thy Right, or proudly Rival thee,
Th'had'st Reason for thy Anger; but while we
Content with what you flight and scorn can be,
Why shou'd you Envy, or disturb our Joys?
Let us possess in Peace these little Toys.

47

ACROSTICH.

[Vain Girl, thy Muse to be more Modest teach]

Vain Girl, thy Muse to be more Modest teach;
Endeavour not at things above thy Reach:
No common Pen for this great Task is fit,
It asks great Dryden's, or sweet Cowley's Wit:
T'express the Beauteous wonders of your Face,
Inimitable Colours, Features, Grace,
Angelick Sweetness, and a charming State,
Compounded sweetly, on each Look doth wait:
Oh, if my Fancy cou'd but reach your Worth,
Or find fit Epithets to set it forth,
Kings then to thy fair Eyes shou'd Homage pay,
Expressing Thee more like the Gods than They.

48

SONG.

[You wrong me Strephon, when you say]

1

You wrong me Strephon, when you say,
I'me Jealous or Severe,
Did I not see you Kiss and Play
With all you came a neer?
Say, did I ever Chide for this,
Or cast one Jealous Eye
On the bold Nymphs, that snatch'd my Bliss
While I stood wishing by?

2

Yet though I never disapprov'd
This modish Liberty;
I thought in them you only lov'd,
Change and Variety:
I vainly thought my Charms so strong,
And you so much my Slave,
No Nymph had Pow'r to do me Wrong,
Or break the Chains I gave.

49

3

But when you seriously Address,
With all your winning Charms,
Unto a Servile Shepherdess,
I'le throw you from my Arms:
I'de rather chuse you shou'd make Love
To every Face you see,
Then Mopsa's dull Admirer prove,
And let Her Rival me.

50

ACROSTICH.

[Rarest of Virgins, in whose Breast and Eyes]

Rarest of Virgins, in whose Breast and Eyes,
All that is Vertuous and Lovely lies:
Cou'd I describe but half thy Excellence,
How wou'd the Gods with speed Bodies condense!
Eternity for Thee they wou'd despise,
Leave their Divine Abodes, new Shapes devise,
Lovelier than that which Danaë did surprize.
Proud if in any Form they thee cou'd please,
Or give to their Immortal Cares some ease;
When us, poor Mortals, with your Sight you bless,
None can find words their wonder to express;
Enamouring and dazling with your Sight,
You prove at once our Torture and Delight.

51

The Twin Flame.

Fantastick, wanton God, what do'st thou mean
To break my Rest? make me grow pale and lean,
And offer Sighs, and yet not know to who,
Or what's more strange, to sigh at once for two.
Tyrant! Thou know'st I was thy Slave before,
And humbly did thy Deity Adore:
I lik'd, nay, doated on my Strephon's Face;
And Sung his Praise, and thine in every place.
My Soul he singly sway'd, alone possest
My Love, and reign'd sole Monarch of my Breast:
Was not all this enough? but thou fond Boy,
Wanton with too much Pow'r, (thy Self t'employ)
Must in my Breast (oh! let it ne're be told)
Kindle new Flame, yet not put out the Old?
Young Clovis now, (though I oppose in vain)
Succeeds not Strephon, but doth with him Reign:

52

And I, though both I love, dare neither choose,
Lest gaining one, I shou'd the other loose:
Both Fires are equal great, Flame equal high,
Yet spight of this, a difference I descry;
One wild and raging, furiously Devours
My Peace, my Rest, and all my pleasant Hours;
The other mild and gentle, like those Fires
That melt Perfumes, creates as sweet desires:
That doth with Violence to Passion tend,
This climbs no higher than the name of Friend.
Yes, greedy Strephon, you shall ever be
My only Love, and singly Reign o're me:
My Passion you shall Monopolize,
You've such resistless Magick in your Eyes.
Though Clovis Merits yours do far transcend,
Yet I'm your Lover, and but Clovis Friend;
Blindly I love you, yet too plain discover,
He'l prove a better Friend then you a Lover.
Accept sweet Clovis of that little part
I can present of my unruly Heart.

53

Cou'd I command my Love, or know a way
My Stubborn, lawless Passion to sway,
My Love I wou'd not Parcel, nor bestow
A little Share, where more than all I owe:
This undeserving Strephon I wou'd teare
From my fond Breast, and place your Merit there:
But 'tis not in my Pow'r, some hidden Fate
Compels me love Him that I strive to Hate.
That Love we to our Prince or Parents pay,
I'le bear to you, and love an humble way:
I'le pay you Veneration for your Love,
And your Admirer, not your Mistress prove.
Oh! be contented with the Sacred Name
Of Friend, and an inviolable Flame
For you I will preserve, and the first place
Of all the few I with that Title grace:
And yet this Friendship doth so fast improve,
I dread, lest it in time shou'd grow to Love.

54

To a Proud Beauty.

Imperious Fool! think not because you're Fair,
That you so much above my Converse are:
VVhat though the Gallants sing your Praises loud,
And with false Plaudits make you vainly Proud?
Tho they may tell you all Adore your Eyes,
And every Heart's your willing Sacrifice;
Or spin the Flatt'ry finer, and perswade
Your easie Vanity, that we were made
For Foyles to make your Lustre Shine more Bright,
Aud must pay Homage to your dazling Light;
Yet know what ever Stories they may tell,
All you can boast, is, to be pretty well:
Know too, you stately piece of Vanity,
That you are not Alone ador'd, for I
Fantastickly might mince, and smile, as well
As you, if Airy Praise my mind cou'd swell:

55

Nor are the loud Applauses that I have,
For a fine Face, or things that Nature gave;
But for acquired Parts, a gen'rous Mind,
A pleasing Converse, neither Nice nor Kind:
When they that strive to Praise you most, can say
No more, but that you're Handsome, brisk and gay:
Since then my Fame's as great as yours is, why
Should you behold me with a loathing Eye?
If you at me cast a disdainful Eye,
In biting Satyr I will Rage so high,
Thunder shall pleasant be to what I'le write,
And you shall Tremble at my very Sight;
VVarn'd by your Danger, none shall dare again,
Provoke my Pen to write in such a strain.

56

SONG.

[Be Judge, dear Strephon, was it kind]

1

Be Judge, dear Strephon, was it kind,
Through ev'ry sense t'invade my Heart;
And when I had my Soul resign'd,
To play a Cruel Tyrants part?

2

Being your Slave, I'm not so vain
To hope to have one minutes Ease,
But shou'd take Pleasure in my Pain,
If my Dear Conqu'rer it wou'd please.

3

In Sighs, and Sobs, and Groans, and Tears,
And Languishment I pass the Day,
My Rest at Night is broke with Fears,
Yet you my Grief with Scorns repay.

57

4

But Since you can so Cruel prove,
To mock the Suffrings you Create,
Triumph and Boast how much I Love,
I'le give your Mirth a speedy Date.

5

For know, Insulter, I disdain
To live to feed your Vanity;
My Blood shall wash out that fond Stain,
My Honour got by loving Thee.

58

To one that asked me why I lov'd J. G.

Why do I Love? go, ask the Glorious Sun
Why every day it round the world doth Run:
Ask Thames and Tyber, why they Ebb and Flow:
Ask Damask Roses, why in June they blow:
Ask Ice and Hail, the reason, why they're Cold:
Decaying Beauties, why they will grow Old:
They'l tell thee, Fate, that every thing doth move,
Inforces them to this, and me to Love.
There is no Reason for our Love or Hate,
'Tis irresistable, as Death or Fate;
'Tis not his Face; I've sence enough to see,
That is not good, though doated on by me:
Nor is't his Tongue, that has this Conquest won;
For that at least is equall'd by my own:

59

His Carriage can to none obliging be,
'Tis Rude, Affected, full of Vanity:
Strangely Ill-natur'd, Peevish, and Unkind,
Unconstant, False, to Jealousie inclin'd;
His Temper cou'd not have so great a Pow'r,
'Tis mutable, and changes every hour:
Those vigorous Years that Women so Adore,
Are past in him: he's twice my Age and more;
And yet I love this false, this worthless Man,
VVith all the Passion that a VVoman can;
Doat on his Imperfections, though I spy
Nothing to Love; I Love, and know not why.
Sure 'tis Decreed in the dark Book of Fate,
That I shou'd Love, and he shou'd be ingrate.

60

Intended Farewel to J. G.

Farewel, Dear Love! may'st thou have in Excess,
Pleasure, Delight, Content, and Happiness:
Oh may thy Joys but equalize my Grief,
Thine great, above compare, as mine beyond Relief:
'Twere vain to wish Fate wou'd to thee be kind,
'Twere vain for thee to bribe the Sea or Wind,
'Twere vainer yet to fear a Storm or Fight,
Who know thy Worth, such thoughts as these will slight.
The Fates their Duty so well understand,
Without my Wish, they'l bring thee safe to Land;
Thy Merits and it's charge, Heaven so well knows,
'Twill guard thee, though unpray'd to, from thy foes,
If thou hast any; But sure no one can
Bear hatred to so Great, so Brave a Man.
But if by chance, thy Princes Enemie
Shou'd hope to make your Ship their Prize to be,

61

Tell the Brave Captain, that he need not fear
Their Force, though Strong, for if thou but appear,
With Awful Reverence they'l strait Retire,
And hold it Impious one Gun to Fire:
Sav'd by thy Pow'r, they'l all acknowledge thee
The Guardian Angel of the Ship to be.

Mocked in Anger.

Farewel ungrateful Man, Sail to some Land,
Where Treach'ry and Ingratitude command;
There meet with all the Plagues that Man can bear,
And be as Wretched, as I'm Happy here.
'Twere vain to wish that Heav'n wou'd Punish thee,
'Twere vain to Invocate the Wind and Sea,
To fright thee with rude Storms, for surely Fate
Without a wish, will Punish the Ingrate
It's Justice and thy Crimes, Heaven so well knows,
That all it's Creatures it will make thy Foes:

62

(If they're not so already) but none can
Love such a worthless, such a sordid Man;
And though we've now no publick Enemies,
And you're too strong for private Piracies,
Yet is the Vessel in more danger far,
Than when with all our Neighbours we had War:
For all that know what Guest it doth contain,
VVill strive to Fire or Sink it in the Main.
Plagu'd for thy sake, they all will reckon thee
The Achan, or Accursed thing to be.

A Lovers State.

Unthinking Fool! wrong not thy Reason so,
To fancy Pleasures in Loves Empire grow.
Alass! a Lovers state is full of Fears,
Their daily Entertainment, Sighs and Tears:
The Cruel god, in Tortures did delight,
And either Shoots at Rovers, or in Spight.

63

Amongst his numerous Slaves, you'l hardly find,
One pair of Lovers mutually kind;
Or if they be, those mighty Bars of Fate,
Int'rest and Friends, their Persons separate:
An am'rous Youth, here for a Lady Dies,
Offring his Heart a Tribute to her Eyes:
With thousand Vows, which proudly she Rejects,
Sighs for another that her Sighs neglects.
A beautious Nymph, whom Heaven and Nature made
To be by all Ador'd, by all Obey'd:
Though thousand Victims sigh beneath her Feet,
In all her Conquests can no Pleasure meet:
But for some Sullen Youth, who proudly Flies,
Dresses her Cheeks in Tears, in languid looks her Eyes.
Here we shall Lovers find, possessing all
That by mistake, we Joys and Pleasures call;
And yet with Jealousies and Idle fears,
Eclipse 'em so, that scarce a Glimps appears.
Men are unconstant, and delight to Range,
Not to gain Freedom, but their Fetters change:

64

And, what a Year they did with Passion seek,
Grows troublesome, and nauseous in a Week:
And the poor Lady, newly taught to Love,
With Grief and Horror, sees her Man remove.
Wonder not then thou canst no Pleasure see,
But know thou seek'st it, where it cannot be.
Who vainly seeks for Joys in Love, as well
Might Quiet seek in Courts, and Ease in Hell.

A Vindication to angry Clovis.

Dear Clovis! can'st thou entertain one Thought
That I, who've with so many Hazards sought
T'oblige and please Thee, now wou'd blot thy Name,
Or seek t'Eclipse thy well deserved Fame?
Shou'd but one word slip from my heedless Tongue,
Against that Vertue I've admired so long,
To expiate it's guilt, I'de in thy sight,
The Impious Criminal in pieces bite.

65

Knew'st thou my thoughts, I then wou'd scorn to fear
The Envious Tales of any Whisperer:
But since that Object is not in thy ken,
My Heart's true Effigiis take from my Pen;
In my Esteem, thou hast so high a Seat,
All I think of Thee's, Eminently great:
From thy sweet Tongue, one word ne're slipt away,
That holy Priests, or Angels, might not say:
Thy Actions so just, and free from Blame,
Heaven by thy Life it's Sacred Laws might frame:
The scatter'd Vertues that all mankind Share,
In thy great self alone united are:
These are my thoughts of Thee, and while they flow
Thus pure, my Tongue can no foul language know:
Those prophane Words cou'd never come from me,
For had'st thou Faults, I have no Eyes to see:
So fast the Ties of sacred Friendship bind,
That when I shou'd not see, I can be blind:
Thou know'st I can not wrong thee, if I wou'd;
And Clovis know, I wou'd not if I cou'd.

66

Last Farewel to J. G.

Farewell thou soft Seducer of my Eyes,
That, in Loves shape, did'st Cruelty disguise,
No longer shall thy lovely Melting Charms
Bewitch my Soul, to please it's self in Harms;
No more I'le show'r down unregarded Tears;
No more I'le break my Rest, with Am'rous Fears;
With Scorching Sighs, I'le blast my Lips no more,
No more thy Pity I'le in vain implore;
In Languishment, no more my Eyes I'le dress,
But reassume that Heart thou did'st possess;
For since the Guest thou wou'd'st not entertain,
It was but just, it shou'd return again:
Now 'tis my own again, with care, and Art
I'le guard each passage that leads to my Heart;
Love shall Resign, and Reason shall command,
And Care and Wisdome Sentinels shall stand:

67

My treachrous eyes, nor thy more treachrous tongue,
Shall not betray me as they've done too long:
Nor will I cast one single Thought on Thee,
Unless my Heart again Assaulted be;
Then I'le remind it of thy Cruelty:
And though the Headstrong Passion shou'd prevaile
Against my Reason, yet this barb'rous Tale
Wou'd make the Rebel willingly Submit,
And change the Fever, to an Ague fit:
For who again wou'd venture on that Shore,
Where hee'd been split and Shipwrackt once before.

The Unkind Parting.

Lovely Unkind! cou'd you so Cruel be
To leave the Land e're you took Leave of me?
Explain this mystick Act, and let me know
Whether it doth your Hate, or Kindness show:
Lov'd you too well my Parting sighs to hear?
Or wanted Strength my kinder Tears to bear?

68

Or were you Tend'rer yet, and did decline
A solemn Leave, not for your Sake, but mine?
Lest my kind Heart o're charg'd with too much Grief,
Shou'd with my Farewell-sighs breath out my Life.
Or was it (how the very Thought doe's fright!)
To show with how much Contempt you cou'd slight?
Or did you love so little, that no Thought
Of poor Ephelia to your mind was brought?
No, no, 'twas none of these; I guess thy mind:
Strephon! thou knew'st I was so fondly kind,
That at the News of Parting, into Tears
I strait had melted, Thousand Am'rous Fears
I had Suggested to my self, and you
In Complaisance must needs have done so too:
You must have told how loth you were to part,
And vow'd that tho you went, I kept your Heart;
Omitted nothing tender Love cou'd shew,
From my pale Cheeks have kist the Pearly Dew;
Spoke all the tender'st things you cou'd devise,
And to the old added new Perjuries;

69

Vow'd Constancy in Absence, and then Swear,
A quick Return shou'd dissipate my Fear:
All of these pleasing Vanities, you knew,
A declar'd Lover was oblig'd to doe:
But to this trouble you wou'd not be brought,
But stole in silence hence; yet tho you thought
This Tale too long, and troublesome to tell,
You might have grasp'd my hand, and said Farewel;
At which dire Words, such Consternation wou'd
Have seiz'd my Soul, I senseless shou'd have stood
'Till you beyond a Sigh's faint Call had fled;
Nay, till Tangiere, you'd near recovered:
This way, my Kindness cou'd not tiresome be,
Nor your Neglect wou'd not have troubled me.

70

Seeing Strephon Ride by after him I supposed gone.

Stay lovely Youth! do not so swiftly fly
From her your Speed must cause as quick to die:
Each step you take, hales me a step more near
To the cold Grave: (nor is't an idle Fear)
For know, my Soul to you is chained fast,
And if you make such cruel, fatal hast,
Must quit it's Seat, and be so far unkind,
To leave my fainting, breathless Trunk behind:
Your Sight unthought of, did so much surprise,
You might have seen my Soul danc'd in my Eyes;
But the cold Look you gave in passing by,
Froze my warm Blood, and taught my Hopes to die:
When you were past, my Spirits soon did fail,
My Limbs grew stiff and cold, my Face grew pale:
My Heart did Pant, scarce cou'd I fetch my Breath,
In every part nothing appear'd but Death:

71

Yet did my Eyes persue your cruel Flight,
Nor ever mov'd, 'till you were out of Sight:
But then, alas, it cannot be exprest,
I faint, I faint, my Death shall tell the rest.

SONG.

[Know, Celadon! in vain you use]

1

Know, Celadon! in vain you use
These little Arts to me:
Though Strephon did my Heart refuse,
I cannot give it thee:
His harsh Refusal hath not brought
It's Value yet so low,
That what was worth that Shepherds Thoughts,
I shou'd on You bestow.

2

Nor can I love my Strephon less,
For his ungrateful Pride,
Though Honour does, I must confess,
My guilty Passion chide.

72

That lovely Youth I still adore,
Though now it be in vain;
But yet of him, I ask no more
Than Pity for my Pain.

To Madam Bhen.

Madam! permit a Muse, that has been long
Silent with wonder, now to find a Tongue:
Forgive that Zeal I can no longer hide,
And pardon a necessitated Pride.
VVhen first your strenuous polite Lines I read,
At once it Wonder and Amazement bred,
To see such things flow from a Womans Pen,
As might be Envy'd by the wittiest Men:
You write so sweetly, that at once you move,
The Ladies Jealousies, and Gallant's Love;
Passions so gentle, and so well exprest,
As needs must be the same fill your own Breast;

73

Then Rough again, as your Inchanting Quill
Commanded Love, or Anger at your Will:
As in your Self, so in your Verses meet,
A rare connexion of Strong and Sweet:
This I admir'd at, and my Pride to show,
Have took the Vanity to tell you so
In humble Verse, that has the Luck to please
Some Rustick Swains, or silly Shepherdess:
But far unfit to reach your Sacred Ears,
Or stand your Judgment: Oh! my conscious Fears
Check my Presumption, yet I must go on,
And finish the rash Task I have begun.
Condemn it Madam, if you please, to th'Fire,
It gladly will your Sacrifice expire,
As sent by one, that rather chose to shew
Her want of Skill, than want of Zeal to you.

74

SONG.

[When Busie Fame, o're all the Plain]

1

When Busie Fame, o're all the Plain
Phylena's Praises rung,
And on their Oaten Pipes, each Swain
Her Matchless Beauty sung:
The Envious Nymphs were forc'd to yield,
She had the sweetest Face;
No Emulous Disputes they held,
But for the second Place.

2

Young Celadon (whose stubborn Heart
No Beauty e're cou'd move,
But smil'd to hear of Bow and Dart,
And brav'd the God of Love:)
Wou'd view this Nymph, and pleas'd at first
Such Silent Charmes to see,
VVith wonder Gaz'd, then Sigh'd, and Curst
His Curiosity.

75

To a Gentleman that had left a Vertuous Lady for a Miss.

Dull Animal miscall'd a Man, for Shame
Give o're your foolish tales of Fire and Flame:
The Nymphs abhor you, and your Stories hate,
Count you a Monster, barb'rously Ingrate:
Your fine sweet Face, in which such Pride you take,
Th'exactness of your clever, easie Make;
Your Charming Meen, bewitching Tongue, nor yet
The fancied Greatness of your boasted Wit,
Can now the meanest Nymph to Pity move,
Though once they taught the great Phylena Love:
Phylena, Glory of the Surrey-Plain,
The envy'd Wish of every hopeless Swain,
Whose Artless Charms, the Proud and Great had brought
Upon their Knees, th'Old and Morose had taught

76

How to Languish, and they that durst not show
They were her Lovers, silently were so:
But you alone, did of her Conquest boast,
In that one Prize all Natures Wealth engross't:
But your insipid Dulness found more Charms,
More Pleasure in the wanton Flora's Armes;
With Her you past your hours in idle Prate,
While poor Phylena unregarded sate:
Kind heart! She wept; and gently She Reprov'd
Your strange Ingratitude, told you, you lov'd
A Shepherdess that had a sickly Fame,
And wou'd bring Infamy upon your Name.
Who can believe? With unheard Impudence
You own'd your Crime, and urg'd in your defence,
The Nymph sung charmingly, was very Witty,
Gay, Brisk, had Teeth; oh! infinitely Pretty:
Ingenious Lime-twigs, to catch Woodcocks on,
Pretty Ingredients to Dote upon!
Can you prefer these trivial Toys, that are
As common as their Owner, to the rare

77

Perfections dwell in your Phylena's Breast,
Things too Divinely Great to be exprest?
Her Vertues, though her Beauty shou'd decay,
Might Charm the World, and make Mankind obey.
Degen'rous Man! break this ignoble Chain,
That dims your Lustre, does your Honour stain;
Or you'l be judg'd for all your vain Pretences,
Not only to have lost your Wits, but Sences.

SONG.

[Ephelia, while her Flocks were fair]

1

Ephelia , while her Flocks were fair,
Was sought by ev'ry Swain,
The Shepherds knew no other care,
Than how her Love to gain:
In Rural Gifts, they vainly strove
Each other to Out-vie,
Fondly imagining her Love
They might with Presents buy.

78

2

But she did every Gist despise,
And ev'ry Shepherd hate,
Till Strephon came, whose Killing Eyes
Was ev'ry Womans Fate:
A while, alas! She vainly strove
The Bleeding Wound to hide,
But soon with Pain cry'd out, I Love,
In spight of all my Pride.

3

The Wolves might now at pleasure Prey,
On her desenceless Sheep;
Her Lambs o're all the Plain did stray,
None in the Fold would keep;
But she regardless of these Harms,
In Pastimes spent the Day,
Or in her faithless Strephons Arms,
Dissolv'd in Pleasures lay.

79

4

But as Her num'rous Flocks decay'd
His Passion did so too,
Till for a Smile the easie Maid
Was forc'd with Tears to woe:
But being Shrunk from few to none,
He left the Nymph forlorn,
Derided now by every one,
That she did lately scorn.

Fortune Mistaken.

Though Fortune have so far from me remov'd,
All that I wish, or all I ever lov'd,
And Rob'd our Europe of its chief Delight,
To bless the Africk world with Strephons Sight:
There with a Lady Beauteous, Rich, and Young,
Kind, Witty, Vertuous, the best Born among
The Africk Maids, presents this happy Swain,
Not to oblige Him, but to give Me Pain:

80

Then to my Ears, by tattling Fame, conveys
The Tale with large Additions; and to raise
My Anger higher, tells me 'tis design'd,
That Hymens Rites, their hands and hearts must bind:
Now She believes my Business done, and I
At the dire News wou'd fetch a Sigh, and Die:
But She's deceiv'd, I in my Strephon grow,
And if he's happy, I must needs be so:
Or if Fate cou'd our Interests disjoyn,
At his good Fortune I shou'd ne're Repine,
Though 'twere my Ruin; but I exulte to hear,
Insulting Mopsa I no more shall fear;
No more he'l smile upon that ugly Witch:
In that one Thought, I'm Happy, Great, and Rich;
And blind Dame Fortune, meaning to Destroy,
Has fill'd my Soul with Extasies of Joy:
To Him I love, She's given a happy Fate,
And quite destroy'd and ruin'd Her I hate.

81

To J. G. on the News of his Marriage.

My Love? alas! I must not call you Mine,
But to your envy'd Bride that Name resign,
I must forget your lovely melting Charms,
And be for ever Banisht from your Arms:
For ever? oh! the Horror of that Sound!
It gives my bleeding Heart a deadly wound:
VVhile I might hope, although my Hope was vain,
It gave some Ease to my unpitty'd Pain,
But now your Hymen doth all Hope exclude,
And but to think is Sin; yet you intrude
On every Thought; if I but close my Eyes,
Methinks your pleasing Form besides me lies;
VVith every Sigh I gently breath your Name,
Yet no ill Thoughts pollute my hallow'd Flame;

82

'Tis pure and harmless, as a Lambent Fire,
And never mingled with a warm Desire:
All I have now to ask of Bounteous Heaven,
Is, that your Perjuries may be forgiven:
That She who you have with your Nuptials blest,
As She's the Happiest VVife, may prove the Best:
That all our Joys may light on you alone,
Then I can be contented to have none:
And never wish that you shou'd Kinder be,
Than now and then, to cast a Thought on Me:
And, Madam, though the Conquest you have won,
Over my Strephon, has my hopes undone;
I'le daily beg of Heaven, he may be
Kinder to You, than he has been to Me.

83

To Damon.

Gay Fop! that know'st no higher Flights than Sense,
What was it gave thee so much Impudence,
T'attempt the violation of a Shrine,
That lodg'd a Soul so Sacred, so Divine?
Her lovely Face might teach thee to Adore,
But cou'd not tempt thee to a loose Amour:
Such charming goodness in her Eyes appear,
Might strike a Satyr with an awful Fear;
But thou, less humane, and more wild than they,
Thy impious Passion durst before her lay:
Sweet Innocence, how she amazed stood,
To hear such Tales, how her affrighted blood
Flush'd in her Face, and then recoyl'd again,
To hear discourse so horridly Prophane!
She look'd such things might teach thee to despair,
Dissolve thy Being, fright thee into Air:

84

But thy unpar'llel'd boldness durst despise
The Sacred Lightning that flasht from her Eyes;
And by a second Guilt, durst tempt her Tongue
To thunder Vengeance on thee, for her Wrong.
Impious Criminal! for this Offence,
Heaven hardly will accept of Penitence:
In tempting of her Vertue, know that you
Have done more than the Devil dar'd to do:
Audacious Villain! sure, thou next wil't try
Deposing of thy God, to rule the Sky:
That Action hardly can more wicked be,
Than what already hath been done by Thee.
If e're again thy Crime thou do'st repeat,
Expect thy Ruine to be quick, and great.
With Thunder-bolts thou shalt be crush'd to Hell,
There with the Devils, and the Damn'd to dwell:
While that bright Maid, that thou would'st have betraid,
Shall be by Angels lov'd, by Men obey'd.

85

To Phylocles, inviting him to Friendship.

1

Best of thy Sex! if Sacred Friendship can
Dwell in the Bosom of inconstant Man;
As cold, and clear as Ice, as Snow unstain'd,
With Love's loose Crimes unsully'd, unprophan'd.

2

Or you a Woman, with that Name dare trust,
And think to Friendship's Ties, we can't be just;
In a strict League, together we'l combine,
And Friendship's bright Example shine.

3

We will forget the Difference of Sex,
Nor shall the World's rude Censure us Perplex:
Think Me all Man: my Soul is Masculine,
And Capable of as great Things as Thine.

86

4

I can be Gen'rous, Just, and Brave,
Secret, and Silent, as the Grave;
And if I cannot yield Relief,
I'le Sympathize in all thy Grief.

5

I will not have a Thought from thee I'le hide,
In all my Actions, Thou shalt be my Guide;
In every Joy of mine, Thou shalt have share,
And I will bear a part in all thy Care.

6

Why do I vainly Talk of what we'l do?
We'l mix our Souls, you shall be Me, I You;
And both so one, it shall be hard to say,
Which is Phylocles, which Ephelia.

7

Our Ties shall be strong as the Chains of Fate,
Conqu'rors, and Kings our Joys shall Emulate;
Forgotten Friendship, held at first Divine,
T'it's native Purity we will refine.

87

To the Honoured Eugenia, commanding me to Write to Her.

Fair Excellence! such strange Commands you lay,
I neither dare Dispute, nor can Obey:
Had I the sweet Orinda's happy Strain,
Yet every Line would Sacriledge contain:
Like to some awful Deity you sit,
At once the Terrour and Delight of Wit:
Your Soul appears in such a charming Dress
As I admire, but never can express:
Heav'n that to others had giv'n sev'ral Graces,
Some noble Souls, some Wit, some lovely Faces:
Finding the World did every one Admire,
Resolv'd to raise their Admiration higher:
And in one Piece, every Perfection croud,
So fram'd your Self, and of it's work grew Proud:

88

Each Rising Sun saw you more Good, more Fair;
As you alone took up all Heaven's Care:
Such awful Charms do in your Face appear,
As fill Man-kind at once with Love and Fear.
VVho hear you Speak, must take your Tongue to be
The first Original of Harmony:
Your Meen hath such a Stately Charming Air,
As without Heralds doth your Birth declare:
Your Soul so Noble, yet from Pride so free,
That 'tis the Pattern of Humility.
Else I had never dar'd to give one Line
To your fair Hand, so Impolite as Mine.
Pardon, dear Madam, these untuned Lays,
That have Prophan'd what I design'd to Praise,
Nor is't possible, but I so must do,
All I can think falls so much short of you:
And Heaven as well with Man might angry be,
For not describing of the Deity,
In its full height of Excellence, as you
Quarrel with them that give you not your Due.

89

To the Beauteous Marina.

1

Nature that had been long by Art out-done,
Resolved a Piece to frame;
So Beauteous, that sawcy Art shou'd own,
She was quite vanquished, and o're-thrown:
And all her mended Faces, after came.
In this Resolve, your lovely Self she made,
And lavish of her Graces,
Out-did her self, exhausted all her Store
Of ev'ry Sweet, till she cou'd give no more;
Bankrupt for ever, to all other Faces.
In Infancy all did the Bud admire,
But when full Blown, it rais'd our Wonder higher,
And Admiration grew into Desire.

90

2

When with your Sight the Change you bless,
Or walk the open Street,
A thousand Tongues your Praise express,
While dying Eyes aloud confess,
You have a Captive in each Man you meet.
When bashful Clovis chanc'd to spy
Your killing Face, with mine,
So much you charm'd that Shepherds Eye,
That my faint Lights he did despise;
And look'd as I my Empire must resign:
Though his each Look, I challenge as my Due,
He scarce gave one; his Eyes no motion knew;
But fixt as the dull Earth, with Wonder gaz'd on you.

91

Passion discovered.

I thought, I'le Swear, that I could freely part,
With the small Theft I'de made of Clovis Heart.
'Tis true, of Him I still had in my Breast
Some busie Thoughts, that did disturb my Rest:
Yet like wild Passion it did not seem,
But lookt like Friendship, or at most, Esteem.
I thought his Heart was a too glorious Prize,
To be a Trophy to my twylight Eyes;
And when with Sighs he has his Passion show'd,
A thousand times I've wisht, it were bestow'd
On sweet Marrina; thinking none beside,
Had Worth enough, to be young Clovis Bride:
And beg'd of Love, that he would give her leave;
He smil'd to see me thus my Self deceive:

92

Fancying that lazy Friendship, that (alas!)
Too late I found an active Passion was:
To undeceive me, brought that Shepherd, where
I, and Marrina both together were:
The Swain surpriz'd, to me did hardly lend
A squinting Glance; but to my Beauteous Friend,
Fierce VVishing-looks from dying Eyes did send.
I turn'd my Head, and sigh'd at the Disgrace,
VVhile Love and Jealousie rag'd in my Face:
Love laught out-right to see my Discontent;
Now Fool (said she) thy fatal Pray'rs repent.
Malicious God (quoth I) so much above
My Self or Interest, I Clovis love,
That still I wish, that lovely Nymph and he united were
But wish not now the Killing-news to hear.

93

To Coridon, on shutting his Door against some Ladies.

Conceited Coxcomb! tho' I was so kind
To wish to see you, think not I design'd
To force my self to your unwilling Arms,
Your Conversation has no such Charms:
Think less, those lovely Virgins were with me,
VVou'd thrust themselves into your Company;
They've Crowds of Gallants, for their Favours sue,
And to be Caress'd, need not come to you:
'Gainst handsom VVomen rudely shut your Dore!
Had it been Serjeants, you cou'd do no more:
Faith, we expected with a horrid yelp,
Out of the VVindow you'd have cry'd, help! help!

94

What Outrage have you offer'd to our Sex?
That you should dread we came but to perplex:
Or since I saw you last, what have I done,
Might cause so strange an Alteration?
Till now, your wishing Eyes have at my Sight,
Spoke you all Rapture, Extasie, Delight:
But at the Change, I have a Critick guess,
So much of Friendship to me you profess,
More than your lazy Tongue can e're express;
And your performance hath been so much less:
That Debtor-like, you dare not meet my Eyes,
Which was the reason of your late Surprize.
I'le tell you, Sir, your kindness to requite
A loving Secret, meerly out of spight:
A Secret four and twenty Moons I've kept,
I've sigh'd in private, and in private wept;
And all for You: but yet so much my Pride
Surmounts my Passion, that now were I try'd,
And th'Heart so long I've wisht for, prostrate lay
Before my Feet, I'de spurn the Toy away:

95

And tho, perhaps, I wish as much as you,
I'le starve my Self, so I may starve You too:
And for a Curse, wish you may never find
An open Door, nor Woman when she's kind.

My Fate.

Oh cruel Fate, when wilt thou weary be?
VVhen satisfied with tormenting me?
VVhat have I e're design'd, but thou hast crost?
All that I wisht to gain by Thee, I've lost:
From my first Infancy, thy Spight thou'st shown,
And from my Cradle, I've thy Malice known;
Thou snatch'st my Parents in their tender Age,
Made me a Victim to the furious Rage
Of cruel Fortune, as severe as thee;
Yet I resolv'd to brave my Destiny,
And did, with more than Female Constancy.

96

Not all thy Malice cou'd extort a Tear,
Nor all thy Rage cou'd ever teach me Fear:
Still as thy Pow'r diminisht my Estate,
My Fortitude did my Desires abate;
In every state I thought my Mind content,
And wisely did thy cross Designs prevent:
Seeing thy Plots did unsuccessful prove,
As a sure Torment next, thou taught'st me Love:
But here thou wer't deceiv'd too, for my Swain
As soon as he perceiv'd, pity'd my Pain:
He met my Passion with an equal Fire,
Both sweetly languisht in a soft Desire:
Claspt in each other's Arms we sate all Day,
Each Smile I gave, he'd with a Kiss repay:
In every Hour an Ages Bliss we reap'd,
And lavish Favours on each other heap'd.
Now sure (thought I) Destiny doth relent,
And her insatiate Tyranny repent:
But how mistaken! how deceiv'd was I!
Alas! She onely rais'd my Hopes thus high,

97

To cast me down with greater Violence;
For midst our Joys, she snatch'd my Shepherd hence
To Africa: yet tho' I' was neglected,
I bore it better than could be expected:
VVithout Regret, I let him cross the Sea,
VVhen I was told it for his Good wou'd be;
But when I heard the Nuptial Knot he'd ty'd,
And made an Afric Nymph his happy Bride:
My Temper then I could no longer hold,
I curs'd my Fate, I curs'd the Pow'r of Gold;
I curs'd the Easiness believ'd at first,
And (Heaven forgive me) Him I almost curs'd.
Hearing my Loss, to him was mighty Gain;
I check'd my Rage, and soon grew Calm again:
Malicious Fate, seeing this wou'd not do,
Made Strephon wretched, to make me so too.
Of all her Plagues, this was the weightiest Stroke,
This Blow, my resolv'd Heart hath almost broke:
Yet, spight of Fate, this Comfort I've in store,
She's no room left for any Ill thing more.

98

To One that Affronted the Excellent Eugenia.

Thing, call'd a Man! Ambition cheats thy Sense,
Or, thou'rt deceiv'd with too much Impudence;
To think that Divine Creature you pursue,
Can be deserv'd, or merited by you:
Dare not to be so Impiously Rude,
To tax such Goodness with Ingratitude;
One Smile from her will more Obligements pay,
Than shoud'st thou live ten Ages, thou coud'st lay.
Thou talk of Obligations! that wer't fram'd
To make proud man of his own Sex asham'd:
When in his greatest Pride, he cast an Eye,
On thy ill Manners and Deformity;
He'l hate himself, and rather wish to be
An Ass, or Owl, than such a thing as thee.

99

Dar'st thou affront Her thou pretend'st t'adore?
That Heavenly Mortal, if she be no more;
Because to them better deserv'd it, she
Shew'd more respect, and more Civility?
You rudely must Invite her to expose
Those God like Men, unto your barb'rous Blows;
She will not do't; not that thy Arm she fears,
Or thinks thy Valour more refin'd than theirs:
Tho' in their Glory she designs no share,
Yet of their Honour she takes too much care,
To let 'em Fight a despicable Thing,
That when they've Conquer'd, can no Trophy bring.
Know, Fool too; thee she does too much contemn,
To let thee boast thou ever Fought'st with them.
To vex thee, they her Favourites shall be,
And make their Court still in abusing thee:
Abusing thee! what have I vainly sed?
What Nonsence unawares I've uttered!
The harshest Satyr that we can invent,
Is Panegyrick, when of Thee 'tis meant.

100

All my Invention cannot reach a Curse,
For whatsoe're I think, still thou art worse;
Yet I'le endeavour at One: Be't thy Fate
To live the Object of Eugenia's Hate.

To Clovis, desiring me to bring Him into Marina's Company.

Charming Insulter! sure you might have chose
Some easier way than this you now propose,
To try the boundless Friendship I profess;
For if Fate can, this Task will make it less.
Clovis, believe; if any Thing there is
I can deny your Merit, it is this:
If I had Rocks of Diamonds, Mines of Ore,
Engross'd the Pearls upon the Eastern-shore;

101

VVith as much Joy, I'de lay'em at your Feet,
As Youthful Monarchs in new Empires meet.
Cou'd you be Happy by my Misery,
In any shape but this, I'de wretched be:
VVith ev'ry other Wish I wou'd comply,
But bright Marina's Sight I must deny:
That Gift's too prodigal; I'de rather part
With Life its self, and give my bleeding Heart:
For I with Blushes own, that Sacred Fire
Once rul'd my Breast, degenerate to desire.
I thought it Friendship; Swore it shou'd be so,
Yet spight of Me, it wou'd to Passion grow.
When to this worthless Heart, you did address,
With all the Marks that Passion cou'd express;
On my soft Neck your Pensive Head wou'd lay,
And Sigh, and Vow, and Kiss the Hours away.
Your Tears, and languish'd Looks I did neglect,
And wou'd not Love, yet highly did Respect;
Thought you the best of Men, and counsel'd you,
To turn your Passion into Friendship too:

102

Told you, my Heart was cruel Strephon's Prize,
His devout, tho neglected Sacrifice:
Wou'd often talk of sweet Marina's Charms,
And oft'ner wish her lodg'd in your dear Arms.
Ah, fatal Wish! ye Gods! why shou'd you mind
The foolish Wishes made by Woman-kind?
I ev'ry hour saw Strephon's Love decay;
And Clovis more Endear'd me every day.
Why at so vast a Rate shou'd he Oblige?
Or, why so soon shou'd he remove his Siege?
That Hour that Mine began, Your Love did end,
You took my Counsel and became my Friend:
And by those Ties, did earnestly request,
That I wou'd make Marina's Heart your Guest.
Oh, cruel Task! you Destinies, am I
In my own Ruine made a Property?
Yet want the Pow'r the Treason to deny?
Yes; tho this piece of knotty Friendship be
Hard in its self, and harder far to me;

103

I'le try, and in th'Attempt such Vigor show,
I'le make her Yours, tho Fate it self say no:
I'le tell your Merits in such soft, smooth Strains,
Shall leave a Thrilling Pleasure in her Veins;
And when my Tongue no sweeter Words can find,
I'le look, as there were ten times more behind.
Then speak again; nor leave her till I spy
She is Inthrall'd, and loves as much as I.
Then I'le present you with this Beauteous Slave,
The greatest Gift a Lover ever gave:
And when you cannot wish happier to grow,
Then think with how much Pain I made you so.

104

In the Person of a Lady to Bajazet, Her unconstant Gallant.

How far are they deceiv'd, that hope in vain
A lasting Lease of Joys from Love t'obtain?
All the Dear Sweets we're promis'd, or expect,
After Enjoyment turn to cold Neglect:
Cou'd Love a constant Happiness have known,
That Mighty Wonder had in Me been shown;
Our Passions were so favoured by Fate,
As if she meant them an Eternal Date:
So kind he look'd, such tender Words he spoke,
'Twas past Belief such Vows shou'd e're be broke:
Fix'd on my Eyes, how often wou'd he say,
He cou'd with Pleasure gaze an Age away.
When Thought, too great for Words, had made him mute,
In Kisses he wou'd tell my Hand his Sute:

105

So strong his Passion was, so far above
The common Gallantries that pass for Love:
At worst, I thought, if he unkind shou'd prove,
His ebbing Passion wou'd be kinder far,
Than the First Transports of all others are:
Nor was my Love weaker, or less than his;
In him I center'd all my hopes of Bliss:
For him, my Duty to my Friends forgot;
For him I lost—alas! what lost I not?
Fame, all the Valuable Things of Life,
To meet his Love by a less Name than Wise.
How happy was I then! how dearly blest!
VVhen this Great Man lay panting on my Breast,
Looking such Things as ne're can be exprest.
Thousand fresh Loves he gave me every hour,
VVhile eagerly I did his Looks devour:
Quite overcome with Charms, I trembling lay,
At every Look he gave, melted away;
I was so highly happy in his Love,
Methought I pity'd those that dwelt above.

106

Think then thou greatest, loveliest, falsest Man,
How you have vow'd, how I have lov'd, and than
My faithless Dear, be cruel if you can.
How I have lov'd, I cannot, need not tell;
No, every Act has shewn I lov'd too well.
Since first I saw you, I ne're had a Thought,
VVas not entirely yours; to you I brought
My Virgin Innocence, and freely made
My Love an Offering to your Noble Bed:
Since when, you've been the Star by which I've steer'd
And nothing else but you, I lov'd, or fear'd:
Your Smiles I onely liv'd by, and I must
VVhen e're you Frown, be shatter'd into Dust.
I cannot live on Pity, or Respect,
A Thought so mean, wou'd my whole Frame infect,
Less than your Love I scorn, Sir, to accept.
Let me not live in dull Indiff'rency,
But give me Rage enough to make me die:
For if from you I needs must meet my Fate,
Before your Pity, I wou'd choose your Hate.

107

To Madam F.

Divinest Thing! whom Heaven made to shew
The very utmost that its Skill cou'd do:
If you had liv'd in ancient Rome, or Greece,
You had had Altars built you long ere this.
Not all the Pow'rs they worship'd, e're-possest
Half of the Merit crouds your Noble Brest.
So Good, so Great, so Brave, so Heavenly Fair;
Princes are proud your Lovely Chains to wear:
So perfect are the Vertues of your Mind,
Not Envy's self, a single Stain can find:
The Vastness of your Gallant Soul doth move
The World to pay an Universal Love.
Yet at an awful Distance they admire;
Beyond a Veneration none aspire.
Oh, may these Blessings have a lasting Date,
And You be safe from all the Strokes of Fate:
My Wish is vain, (and Pray'rs are needless too)
Heav'n is too Just to be Unkind to You.

108

SONG.

[Know, Strephon, once I lov'd you more]

1

Know, Strephon, once I lov'd you more
Than Misers do their Wealth;
I took from Heaven you to adore,
And thought no Sin i'th' Stealth:
I knew no Joys, but what you gave,
Nor ever had a Thought
Of any state beyond your Slave,
Freedom I never sought.

2

But since your strange Ingratitude,
Cou'd the soft Favours slight,
For which your Rivals vainly su'd,
Know you've no longer Right,
To the least Joy that I can give,
So unconcern'd I'le prove,
The World shall easily believe
That I did never love.

109

To the Angry Eugenia.

[Incensed Fair One! if Forgiveness be]

Incensed Fair One! if Forgiveness be
Not in thy Power to extend to Me;
Which to believe, were such an impious Thought,
Heav'n scarce wou'd pardon, tho with Tears 'twere sought.
Destroy at once the Creature that you hate,
And wrack me not with a sad ling'ring Fate:
Yet e're I Die, permit some small Defence,
Not that I will pretend to Innocence;
That were to think that You have been Unjust,
Which let me Perish when I once Mistrust.
With all that Rev'rence that a Pious Jew
Wou'd name Jehovah, I should Speak of You:
But I, prophanely nam'd you in the Ear
Of Crowds unfit such Sacred Sounds to hear:
Yet what I said, if traced, you will find,
Tho short of you, out-did all Woman-kind.

110

My Fault was too much Zeal; this forc'd my Tongue
To tell the Worth it had Adored long.
My Life will witness this; for, Madam, know,
I love too well to Live and Injure You.

SONG.

[Ah Phillis! had you never lov'd]

1

Ah Phillis! had you never lov'd,
Your Hate I could have born
Contentedly, I wou'd have prov'd
The Object of your Scorn.
But you were once as soft, as kind,
As yielding Virgins be;
Gods! that That Face shou'd have a Mind
Stain'd with Inconstancy.

2

No Tongue can tell the Mighty Joy
Your Kindness did Create;
But the Sweet Rapture you destroy,
With suddain causeless Hate.

111

So have I seen a Rising Sun
Promise a glorious day;
But soon o'er cast its brightness gone,
Did to rough Storms give way.

To Madam G.

Spight of my best Resolves, my Thoughts aspire
To speak, what I in silence shou'd admire:
How vainly I endeavour to express
What none can e'er describe, but make it less:
When your Composure was at first design'd,
Heaven to a vast extravagance was kind:
Beauty and Wit did lavishly contest,
Who shou'd give most, which shou'd adorn you best.
A stately Meen, soft Charms, a Face so sweet;
In you alone do all Perfections meet.
So bright your Beauty, so sublime your Wit,
None but a Prince to wear your Chains is fit.

112

I wou'd wish something, but all Heavens store
Cannot afford one single blessing more:
Honour nor Wealth you want, nor anything,
Unless I wish you a Perpetual Spring
Of Youth and blooming Beauties, such as may
Make all your envious Rivals pine away.

A Nuptial Song.

Joy to the Bridegroom, fill the Skies
With pleasing Sounds of welcom Joys.
Joy to the Bride, and lasting Bliss,
That every Night may prove like this.
You that enjoy such Beauties fair,
Be true to love, I say take care;
For that which grieves a Female most,
Is to find her Expectation crost.

113

Never were Marriage Joys Divine,
But when two did in one combine:
And he that proves false himself doth cheat,
As sick men taste but cannot eat.
What is a Maidenhead, O what?
Of which weak Fools so often prate?
Oh 'tis a Virgins pride and boast,
That ne'er was found but when 'twas lost.

Loves Revenge.

Phillis , whose Heart was unconfin'd,
And free as Flowers on Meads and Plains;
None boasted of her being kind,
'Mongst all the languishing and am'rous Swains.
No sighs or tears her Heart could move,
To pity or return their Love.

114

Till on a time the hapless Maid
Retir'd to shun the heat of day,
Into a Grove beneath whose shade
Strephon the careless Shepherd slept and lay.
Here Love's reveng'd for all her scorn,
Her Cheeks with blushes cover'd mourn.
The Youth she pitied too, and fear'd,
And tender Sighs her bosom warm;
A softness in her Eyes appear'd,
Unusually she feels each Charm.
To Woods and Echoes then she cries,
For Modesty to speak denies.

Phylander and Phylenia.

Phylander walking all alone,
Phylenia pass'd that way;
The fairest Nymph of all the Plain,
Brighter than blushing day.

115

The Youth delighted in his Bow,
No youthful Dart he fear'd:
Onely to conquer he knew how,
Till that bright Star appear'd.
But now his warlike Rage is fled,
A Suppliant he became,
And onely begg'd Phylenia would
Accept his amorous Flame.
The Nymph was coy, and did refuse
To hear him tell his Love:
And would have fled, but streight the Youth
Invok'd the mighty Jove.
Who from his Heav'n on them look'd down,
And caus'd the God of Charms
To stick a Dart into her Heart,
And force her to his Arms.

116

Which Cupid cunnigly perform'd,
So excellent was his art,
That by consent she gave the Youth
Her Virgin Hand and Heart.

The Farewel to Ingratitude.

Farewel ungrateful Traytor,
Farewel my perjur'd Swain;
Let never injur'd Creature
Believe a Man again.
The pleasure of possessing
Surpasses all expressing,
But Joy's too short a blessing,
And Love's too long a pain.
But Joy's, &c.
O Love, thou art a Treasure,
Would Constancy remain;

117

But for one hour of pleasure
We find an age of pain.
How eager is the Lover,
Poor Women may discover,
The Vows of Men are vain.
Poor Women, &c.
'Tis easie to deceive us,
In pity of our pain;
But when we love you leave us
To rail at you in vain.
There is no bliss besides it,
But she that once hath try'd it,
Will never love again.
But she, &c.
The Passions you pretended
Were only to obtain;
But when the Charm was ended,
The Charmer you disdain.

118

Your Love by hours we measure,
Till we have lost our Treasure;
But Dying is a pleasure,
When Living is a pain.
But Dying, &c.

SONG.

[Come Lasses and Lads]

Come Lasses and Lads,
Take leave of your Dads,
And away to the Maypole hie;
Where every Lad
Has got him a Lass,
And a Minstrel standing by.
Then after an hour
They went to a Bower,
To play for Ale and Cakes;

119

For Kisses too,
Untill they were due,
The Maidens they held stakes.
The Lasses then began
To quarrel with the Men,
And bid 'em take their Kisses back,
Which we (quoth they)
Will throw away,
For we do not them lack.
You're out, says Dick;
You lie, says Nick,
For the Piper he plays false;
And so said Hugh,
And so said Sue,
And so said nimble Alce.
The Piper then
In a merry vein

120

Began to play the Tune agen:
And then by the Mass,
Oh how every Lass
Did jet it, jet it to the Men.

Recreation allowed.

Since Business of State is already decreed,
Make room for Affairs of the Court:
Imployments and Pleasures each other succeed,
Because they each other support.
Were Princes confin'd from slack'ning their Mind,
When by cares in confusion they'r hurl'd;
Then a Crown might appear too heavy to wear,
And no man would govern the World.
If the Gods themselves, who have power enough,
In Diversions are various and oft;

121

The business of Kings being angry and rough,
Their Intervals ought to be soft.
The business of Kings, &c.

But for hope Heart would break.

Can Life be a blessing, or worth the possessing;
Can Life be a blessing where Love is away?
Ah no, though our Laugh it might keep us waking,
And though he torment us with care all the day;
Yet he sweetens, he sweetens our pains in the taking
There's an hour at last, there's an hour to repay.
In every possessing each ravishing blessing,
In every possessing the fruit of our pain:
Poor Lovers forget the long Ages of anguish,
What e'er they have suffer'd or done to obtain.
'Tis a pleasure, a pleasure to sigh and to languish,
When we hope, when we hope to be happy again.

122

A Rapture.

Hence, hence, you vain Fantastic Fears
Of Ills to come we know not where:
Stand off with thy Infernal Face,
Don't fright me from my Love's Embrace.
To what a height should we love on,
Were thou and all thy Shadows gone?
Sigh, sigh no more, to cry forbear,
To sin we neither must nor dare:
If sin can in such pleasure dwell,
Or such can be the Gates of Hell,
What Flesh can hold from entering in?
Heavens forgive so sweet a sin!
Down, down, she doth begin to fall,
And now the Shadows vanish all;

123

And now the Gates are ope to bliss,
See how we enter Paradise;
Where envying Angels flock to view,
And wonder what it is we do.

SONG.

[Hail to the Myrtle Shade!]

Hail to the Myrtle Shade!
All hail to the Nymphs of the Fields!
Kings will not here invade,
Though Vertue all freedom yields.
Beauty here opens her Arms,
To soften the languishing Mind;
And Phillis unlocks her Charms.
Oh Phillis, Oh why so kind!
Phillis the Soul of Love,
And Joy of the neighbouring Swains;
Phillis that crowns the Groves,
And Phillis that guilds the Plains.

124

Phillis that ne'er had the skill
To paint, or to patch, or be fine;
Yet Phillis whose Eyes can kill,
Whom Nature has made Divine.
Phillis whose charming Tongue
Makes labour and pain a delight:
Phillis that makes the Day young,
And shortens the live-long Night.
Phillis whose Lips like May
Still smile on the pleasures they bring,
Where Love never knew decay,
But keeps an Eternal Spring.

Loves Advice.

Blush not redder than the morning,
Though the Gipsie gives you warning:
Sigh not at the chance befell you,
Though she smile and dares not tell you.

125

Maids like Turtles love the Cooing,
Bill and murmur in their wooing;
Thus like us they'll start and tremble,
And their studied Joys dissemble.
Grasp the pleasure while 'tis coming,
Though your Beauties now are blooming:
Time at last those Joys will sever,
And they'll part, they'll part for ever.

The Expostulation.

Insulting Charmer of my languish'd Heart,
Canst thou feel Love, and yet not let me go?
Since of my self from thee I cannot part;
Devise some gentle way to let me go.
For what with ease thou didst obtain,
And I with more did give;

126

In time will make thee false and vain,
And me unfit to live.
Then let our flaming Hearts be joyn'd
Whole in that smoking Fire,
Ere you prove false or I prove kind,
Together both expire.

The Contest.

A lovely Pair endu'd by Fate
With Love and Beauties whole Estate,
At the sweetest Game had been,
You know, you know what I mean.
You know, &c.
For Kisses first the Lovers plaid;
The pleasant sport provok'd the Maid

127

To the height. He growing mad,
Was like to play for all she had;
But the Maid was not so mad.
But the Maid, &c.
She'll ask her Father leave she swears,
And then will play for what he dares:
Leave is had, and to't they go;
What I mean you know, you know.
What I mean, &c.
To deeper play they then begin,
The young mans happy hand was in;
Both had stak'd down all their joys,
But she loses then she cries.
But she loses, &c.
But now she's gain'd, a tempting sight,
Has won her Heart full of delight;

128

Mo deeper Play she urges on,
But alas! his Stakes are done.
But alas! &c.

No Reason to be given.

Ah Celia, when we lately lov'd,
Then I enjoy'd your Heart alone;
And you my Passion too approv'd,
And call'd me still your Loyal one.
When equal Flames and like Desires
Lay sparkling in each others eyes,
And all the Joys that Love inspires
Were then the subject of our Fires:
There was no Coyness to embrace,
At which the sowre can onely wonder:
For what the Souls think no disgrace,
The Bodies ne'er could part asunder.

129

And who can tell how often we
By joyning Lips have Souls exchang'd,
While Pleasure triumph'd thus to see
Th'exchang'd so pleasantly reveng'd.
Yet still our Flames were pure and chaste,
As chaste as are the morning Beams;
How chanc'd it then they did not last,
What Fuel fail'd to feed such Flames?
Ah Celia, Celia, well thou knowst,
It was no fault of thine or mine;
But truest Lovers must be crost,
When ever Love and Fate combine.
Else Love and Fate had different aims;
And Love (to curb Fates envious pow'r)
Himself put out those am'rous Flames,
Which he had cherished so before.

130

Pro and Con.

On the Bank of a River close under a Shade
Young Celia and Strephon one evening were laid:
The Youth pleaded strongly for the faults of his Love,
But Honour constrain'd her his Flames to reprove.
She cries, Where's the Lustre when Clouds shade the Sun?
Or where is the Nectar when the Bottles are done?
Among Flowers on Stalks sweet Odors do dwell,
But when gathered the Rose it loseth his smell.
Thou dearest of Nymphs, the brisk Shepherd replied,
If ever thou't argue begin on Loves side:

131

In matters of State let all reason beshew'd,
But Love is a Power not rul'd by the Crowd.
Nor should the coy Dame be counted so rare,
For Scandal can't touch the chast and the fair:
More nobler Passions are lodg'd in that Brest,
And the Joys of true Love are sweeter than Rest.

Jemmey.

Young Jemmey was a Lad
Of Royal Birth and Breeding,
With every Beauty clad,
And every Swain exceeding:
A Face, a Shape so wond'rous fine,
So charming every part,
That every Lass upon the Green
For Jemmey had a Heart.

132

In Jemmey's powerful eyes
Young Gods of Love were playing,
And on his Face was seen
A thousand Smiles betraying.
But oh he dances with a grace,
None like him e'er was seen;
No God that ever feigned was,
Had e'er so fine a Meen.
To Jemmey every Swain
Did lowly doff his Bonnet,
And every Lass would strain
To praise him with a Sonnet.
The pride of all the Lads he was,
The Joy of all the Groves;
The pleasure of each tender Lass,
The Theme of all our Loves.
But Oh unlucky Fate,
A curse upon Ambition;

133

The busie Fools of late
Have ruined his Condition:
The glittering Hopes have left his Shade,
His glorious Hours are gone,
By flattering Knaves and Fools betray'd,
Poor Jemmey is undone.

To Scornful Sylvia.

Oh fie upon this needless scorn,
Sylvia for shame thy Cheat give o'er;
The end for which the Fair were born,
Is not to keep their Charms in store.
But lavishly dispose in hast
Of Joys which none but Youth improve;
Joys which decay when Beauty's past,
And who when Beauties past will love?
When Age these Glories shall deface,
Revenging all your cold disdain;

134

And Sylvia shall neglected pass
By every brisk admiring Swain.
And we can onely pity pay,
When you alone too late shall burn,
If Love decrease and Youth decay,
Ah Sylvia who will make return?
Then haste my Sylvia to the Grove,
Where all the Sweets of May conspire,
To teach us every Art of Love,
And raise our Charms of Pleasure higher.
And when embracing we shall lie,
Closely in Shades on Banks of Flowers;
The duller World we'll then defie,
Years will be Minutes, Ages Hours.

The Green-Sickness Cure.

Fair Ladies & Maidens, if it may you so please,
We Doctors who all have taken Degrees,

135

By your Faces so pale, that look like Green Cheeses,
Do shrewdly conjecture all what your Disease is;
We guess what your wants are,
'Cause we know you no Saints are;
Then take our advice for we tell ye demurely,
After tedeous debate
Of your sickly estate,
'Tis onely a brisk young Doctor can cure ye.
In vain Men-midwives may trouble your Chambers,
An impertinent Brood, onely Quacks for the Glanders:
You may steal a Receipt from the Countess of Kent,
You may thumb the Queens Closet, 'tis time but ill spent:

136

You may swallow Steel Pills,
And run up high Hills;
But take our advice, for we tell ye demurely,
After tedeous debate
Of your sickly estate,
'Tis onely a brisk young Doctor can cure ye.
We must tell ye moreover we sent into France,
Where the Doctors agree to what we advance.
Oh Ladies so ill, and so weak of Belief,
When your Doctors from France do send ye relief!
Will you die, and despise
Your dear Frenchmen so wise?
Then take our advice, for we tell ye demurely,
After serious debate
Of your sickly estate,
'Tis onely a brisk young Doctor can cure ye.
We must tell ye besides for the sake of your Bums
That the Coffee House news is more Whipping Toms.

137

Then Ladies beware, for if once he should find ye
Despising the French, & those that are kind t'ye;
For eating Oatmeal and Coals
He'll smoke your Bung-holes,
And teach you to take good advice: For demurely
As we stated the case
His Opinion was,
That onely a brisk young Doctor could cure ye.

In praise of Wine.

Cease to argue, for they err,
That sententiously severe
Dispraise the noble Wine:
'Tis the sober part of the World that is mad,
That musing and sad,
Defames the Juice of the Vine.
They that feigned the Gods carowsing,
But new Charms to Pleasures rowsing,

138

From high Example taught;
Lest Nature surpriz'd to hear Gravity cant,
Should Arguments want,
To convince the Formal Coat.
Turks forbid this pleasing Cup,
Forfeit Heaven to drink it up,
And swill Abonination:
For their Conquests untill'd, where Nectar did flow
Most plainly do shew
Their Prophets Impolitic Passion.
Give us then the happy Juice,
That doth wit and mirth infuse,
Which Mortals all admire:
By whose Charms they have given to Bacchus the praise,
But put to disgrace
The deserving Chief of Fire.

139

Loyal Wine no Treason hatches,
But inspiring Odes and Catches,
Still provokes to new Delights:
'Tis Food is the Rebel, & your Gluttons are they,
That Vulture-like prey
Upon their Princes Rights.
For with vain and idle grudges,
To presume as Princes Judges
Of Princes Acts to Reason;
Is a Boldness so high and so void of Religion,
That Coffee less Stygian
Nere vented fouler Treason.

SONG.

[Phillis accept a stubborn Heart]

Phillis accept a stubborn Heart,
Which none but you could move:
Beauty like yours should scorn a part
In forcing perjur'd Love.

140

Yet I alas have seen you smile
As one makes Love a Trade:
You smil'd, but thought (I hope) the while
On those he had betray'd.
Must all be cozened that are fair,
And slighted that are true;
'Tis time for me then to despair,
My Heart's so just to you.
If you're engag'd then I'm undone,
Though you should change to me;
For she that can prove false to one,
Will false for ever be.

CATCH.

Hold fast thy Sword and Sceptre, Charles,
Sad Times are coming on:

141

The murmuring of the Senate House
Smells strong of Forty One.
When Kings are call'd to give account
What their Expences be;
It is a sign we are all Kings,
Or that no King can be.
Give way but to their Wills awhile,
And you shall find as great
A Will in them to act anew
From One to Forty Eight.
Hold, cruel England, hold, in thee
Though all Rebellion springs:
Consider but thine end from me,
That kill'd the best of Kings.

142

The Maim'd Debauchee.

As some brave Admiral in former War
Depriv'd of Force, but press'd with Courage still,
Two Rival Fleets appearing from afar,
Crawls to the top of an adjacent Hill;
From whence with thoughts full of concern he views
The wise & daring Conduct of the Fight
And each bold Action to his Mind renews
His present Glory and his past Delight.
From his fierce eyes Flashes of Rage he throws,
As from thick Clouds when Lightning breaks away;
Transported thinks himself amidst his Foes,
And absent yet enjoys the bloudy day.
So when my Days of Impotence approach,
And I'm by Pox and Wines unlucky chance,

143

Driven from the pleasing Billows of Debauch,
On the dull Shore of lazy Temperance.
My pains at last some respit shall afford,
While I behold the Battels you maintain;
When Fleets of Glasses sail about the Board,
From whose Broad-sides Volleys of Wit shall rain.
Nor shall the sight of Honourable Scars,
Which my too forward Valour did procure,
Frighten new listed Souldiers from the Wars,
Past Joys have more than paid what I endure.
Should hopeful Youth (worth being drunk) prove nice,
And from their fair Inviters meanly shrink;
'Twould please the Ghost of my departed Vice,
If at my counsel they repent and drink.
Or shou'd some cold complexion'd Sot forbid,
With his dull Morals our Nights brisk Alarms

144

I'll fire his Bloud by telling what I did,
When I was strong and able to bear Arms.
I'll tell of Whores attacqu'd their Lords at home,
Bawds Quarters beaten up and Fortress won:
Windows demolish'd, Watches overcome,
And handsom Ills by my contrivance done.
With Tales like these I will such heat inspire,
As to important mischief shall incline:
I'll make them long some ancient Church to fire,
And fear no lewdness they're call'd to by Wine.
This Statesman like I'll sawcily impose,
And safe from danger valiantly advise;
Shelter'd in Impotence urge you to Blows,
And being good for nothing else be wise.

145

Upon his leaving his Mistress.

'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 onely mine?
You whom some tender Power did fashion
By Merit and by Inclination,
The Joy at least of one whole Nation.
Let meaner Spirits of your Sex
With humbler aims their thoughts perplex;
And boast, if by their Arts they can
Contrive to make one happy Man:
Whilest mov'd by an impartial sence,
Favours like Nature you dispence
With universal Influence.

146

See the kind Seed receiving Earth
To every Grain affords a birth:
On her no Showers unwelcom fall,
Her willing Womb retains them all.
And shall my Celia be confin'd?
No, live up to thy mighty mind,
And be the Mistress of Mankind.

Upon the view of his Mistress Face in a Glass.

Ah cruel Glass, didst thou not see
Cloris alone too hard for me?
Perceiv'dst thou not her charming sight
Did ravish mine in cruel sight?
But then another she must frame,
Whose single Forces well might tame
A Lovers Heart; no Humane one
Is proof against her force alone.

147

Yet did I venture (though struck mute)
The Beauteous Vision to salute;
But that, like Air in figur'd Charms,
Deceiv'd the ambush of my Arms.
'Twas some wise Angel her shape took,
That so he might more heavenly look.
I her old Captive now do yield
Her shadowed self another field;
By such odds overcome to die,
Is no dishonour'd Victory.

SIGHS.

Oh tell me, tell thou God of Wind,
In all thy Caverns canst thou find
A Vapour, Flame, a Gale, or Blast,
Like to a Sigh which Love doth cast?
Can any Whirlwind in thy Vault
Plow up the Heart with like assault?

148

Go Wind, and blow then where thou please,
Yea breathless leave me to my ease.
If thou be'st Wind, O then restrain
From wrecking me whilest I complain.
If thou be'st Wind, then light thou art,
And yet how heavy is my Heart?
If thou be'st Wind, then clear thy way,
Let Care that clogs thy force obey.
Go Wind, &c.
These blasts of sighing roused are
By th'influence of my bright Star:
The Eolus from whence they came
Is Love that strains to blow the same.
The angry sway of whose behest
Makes Hearth and Bellows of one Brest.
Go Wind, &c.

149

Know 'tis a Wind that longs to blow
Upon my Saint where e'er she go;
And stealing through her Fan it bears
Soft Errands to her Lips and Ears;
And then perhaps a passage makes
Down to the Heart where Breath she takes.
Go Wind, &c.
Yea gentle Gale try it again,
O do not pass from me in vain;
Go mingle with her Soul Divine,
Engendering Spirits like to mine.
Yea take my Soul along with thee
To work a stronger Sympathy.
Go Wind, &c.
My Soul before the grosser part
Thus to her Heaven should depart;
And when my Body cannot lie
On the Winds wings, she soon shall fly;

150

Though not one Soul our Bodies joyn,
Our Bodies shall our Souls combine.
Go Wind and blow then where you please,
Yea breathless leave me to my ease.

To his Letter.

Fly Paper, kiss those hands
Whence I am barr'd of late;
She quickly will unloose thy bands,
O wish me thine estate.
Appear unto her eyes,
Though they do burn to fumes;
For happy is the Sacrifice,
Which Heavenly Fire consumes.
Yet even too with this depart
With a soft dying breath;

151

Whisper the truths into her ear,
And take them on thy death.
Tell her how thou canst now,
New Oaths or give or take;
Or to repeat the former vow
We did each other make.
Say thou camest to complain,
But not of Love nor her;
But on my Fortune being fain
Thus absent to confer.
When thou hast offer'd this,
Perhaps then for thy pain
She will impart to thee a Kiss,
And read thee o'er again.
Perhaps when for my sake
Her Lips have made thee blest;

152

That so embalm'd thee, she will make
Thy Grave within her Brest.
Oh never then desire
To rise from such a doom:
Who would not leave his Life t'aspire
By Death to such a Tomb?
Then in thy Joys excess
Melt, languish, faint, and die:
For might I have so free access,
Sure even so would I.

Upon a Drinking Bowle.

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.

153

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.
Engrave not Battel on his cheek,
With War I've nought to do;
I'm none of those that took Maestricht,
Nor Yarmouth Leaguer know.
Let it no name of Planets tell,
Fix'd Stars, or Constellations;
For I am no Sir Sydrophel,
Nor none of his Relations.
But carve thereon a spreading Vine,
Then add two lovely Boys,
Their Limbs in amorous folds intwine,
The type of future Joys.

154

Cupid and Bacchus my Saints are,
May Drink and Love still reign;
With Wine I wash away my cares,
And then to Love again.

SONG.

[As Cloris full of harmless thoughts]

As Cloris full of harmless thoughts
Beneath a Willow lay,
Kind Love a youthful Shepherd brought
To pass the time away.
She blush'd to be encountered so,
And chid the amorous Swain:
But as she strove to rise and go,
He pull'd her down again.
A sudden passion seiz'd her heart
In spight of her disdain;

155

She found a Pulse in every part,
And Love in every vein.
Ah you (said she) what Charms are these,
That conquer and surprize?
Ah let me—for unless you please,
I have no power to rise.
She fainting spoke, and trembling lay,
For fear he should comply;
Her lovely Eyes her Heart betray,
And gives her Tongue the Lie.
Thus she who Princes had denied,
With all their pomp and train,
Was in the lucky minute tried,
And yielded to the Swain.

156

An Answer to Ephelia's Letter to Bajazet.

Madam, if y're deceiv'd, it is not by my cheat,
For all Disguizes are below the Great.
What Man or Woman upon earth can say,
I ever us'd 'em well above a day?
How is it then that I inconstant am?
It changes not that always is the same.
In my dear self I centre every thing,
My Servants, Friends, my Mistress, and my King;
Nay Heaven and Earth to that one point I bring.
Well manner'd, honest, generous, and stout,
Names by dull Fools to plague Mankind found out,
Should I regard I must my self constrain,
And 'tis my Maxim to avoid all pain.
You fondly look for what none e'er could find,
Deceive your self, and then call me to mind:

157

And by false Reasons would my Falshood prove,
For 'tis as natural to change as love.
You may as justly at the Sun repine,
Because alike it does not always shine.
No glorious thing was ever made to stay,
My Blazing Star but visits and away:
As fatal too it shines as those i'th'Skies,
'Tis never seen but some great Lady dies.
The boasted favour you so precious hold,
To me's no more than changing of my Gold.
What e'er you gave I paid you back in bliss,
Then where's the Obligation pray of this?
If heretofore you found grace in my eyes,
Be thankful for it, and let that suffice:
But Women Beggar-like still haunt the door,
Where they've receiv'd a Charity before.
O Happy Sultan, whom we Barbarous call,
How much refin'd art thou above us all?
Who envies not the joys of thy Serale?

158

Thee like some God the trembling Crowd adore?
Each man's thy Slave and womankind thy Whore
Methinks I see thee underneath the shade
Of Golden Canopy supinely laid.
Thy crowding Slaves all silent as the Night,
But at thy nod all active as the Light.
Secure in sullen sloth thou there dost reign,
And feelest the joys of Love without the pain.
Each Female courts thee with a wishing Eye,
While thou with awful pride walkst careless by;
Till thy kind pledge at length marks out one Dame,
Thou fanciest most to quench thy present Flame.
Then from thy Bed submissive she retires,
And thankful for the Grace no more requires.
No loud reproach, nor foul unwelcom sound
Of Womens Tongues thy sacred Ear does wound:
If any do, a nimble Muse streight ties
The True-loves Knot, and stops her foolish cries.

159

Thou fearest no injur'd Kinsmans threatning Blade,
Nor Midnight Ambushes by Rivals laid:
While here with aking Hearts our Joys we taste,
Disturb'd by Swords like Damocles his Feast.

SONG.

[Give me leave to rail at you]

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, but would not die.
Kindness has resistless Charms,
All besides but weakly move;

160

Fiercest Anger it disarms,
And clips the wings of flying Love.
Beauty does the Heart invade,
Kindness onely can th'Heart persuade:
It guilds the Lovers Servile Chain,
And makes the Slave grow pleas'd again.

The Answer.

Nothing adds to your fond Fire
More than Scorn or cold Disdain;
I to cherish your desire
Kindness us'd, but 'twas in vain.
You insulted on your Slave,
Humble Love you soon refus'd:
Hope not then a power to have,
Which ingloriously you us'd.

161

Think not, Thirses, I will e'er
By my Love my Empire lose:
You grow constant through despair,
Love return'd you would abuse.
Though you still possess my Heart,
Scorn and Rigour I must feign.
Ah forgive that onely Art
Love has lost your Love to gain.
You that could my Heart subdue
To new Conquests ne'er pretend;
Let your Example make me true,
And of a conquer'd Foe a Friend.
Then if e'er I should complain
Of your Empire or my Chain;
Summon all your powerful Charms,
And sell the Rebel in your Arms.

162

The Town Blade.

Room, Room for a Blade of the Town,
That takes delight in roaring,
And daily rambles up and down,
And spends the night in whoring:
That for the noble name of Spark
Does his Companions rally;
Commits an outrage in the dark,
Then slinks into an Alley.
To every Female that he meets,
He swears he bears affection;
Defies all Laws, Arrests, and Fears,
By the help of a kind Protection.
[OMITTED]
[_]

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167

[Honour's got in, and keeps her heart]

[OMITTED]
Honour's got in, and keeps her heart,
Durst he but venture once abroad;
In my own right I'd take your part,
And shut him out from his aboad.
This huffing Honour dominiers
In Breasts alone where he has place;
But if true generous Love appears,
The Hector dares not shew his face.
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.
I fall a Sacrifice to Love,
She lives a Wretch for Honours sake;
Whose Tyrant does most cruel prove,
The difference is not hard to make.

168

Consider real Honour then,
You'll find hers cannot be the same;
'Tis Noble Confidence in Men,
In Women mean distrustful Shame.

SONG.

[Phillis, be gentler I advise]

Phillis , be gentler I advise,
Make up for Time ill spent:
When Beauty on its Death-bed lies,
'Tis high time to repent.
Such is the Malice of your Fate,
That makes you old so soon;
Your Pleasure ever comes too late,
How early e'er begun.
Think what a wretched thing is she,
Whose Stars contrive in spight,

169

The Morning of her Love should be
Her fading Beauty's Night.
Then if to make your ruine more,
You'll peevishly be coy,
Die with the scandal of a Miss,
And never know the Joy.
FINIS.