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Nuptial Dialogues and Debates

Or, An Useful Prospect of the felicities and discomforts of a marry'd life, Incident to all Degrees, from the Throne to the Cottage. Containing, Many great Examples of Love, Piety, Prudence, Justice, and all the excellent Vertues, that largely contribute to the true Happiness of Wedlock. Drawn from the Lives of our own Princes, Nobility, and other Quality, in Prosperity and Adversity. Also the fantastical Humours of all Fops, Coquets, Bullies, Jilts, fond Fools, and Wantons; old Fumblers, barren Ladies, Misers, parsimonious Wives, Ninnies, Sluts and Termagants; drunken Husbands, toaping Gossips, schismatical Precisians, and devout Hypocrites of all sorts. Digested into serious, merry, and satyrical Poems, wherein both Sexes, in all Stations, are reminded of their Duty, and taught how to be happy in a Matrimonial State. In Two Volumes. By the Author of the London Spy [i.e. Edward Ward]
  

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Moral Reflexions on the foregoing Dialogue.
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Moral Reflexions on the foregoing Dialogue.

[Our holy Guides may preach and pray]

Our holy Guides may preach and pray
In Pulpits 'till they're weary,
If we resolve to disobey,
And from their Precepts vary.
The pious Priest may eas'ly win
The Soul inclin'd to Goodness,

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But seldom draws the Man of Sin
From his habitual Lewdness;
'Till, in his Age, the Wretch begins
To feel his past Debauches;
And then, perhaps, he'll curse the Sins
That brought him to his Crutches.
So that it is not what he hears
From his laborious Teacher,
But Gout or Stone, at feeble Years,
That mends the crazy Letcher.
The Seeds of Grace must in our Youth
Be sown by Education,
And then we grow in Faith and Truth,
And feel their Operation.
But if, when young, to lustful Rage
We prostitute our Reason,
We seldom then reform, 'till Age,
Expels the sinful Poyson.