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Poems

or, A Miscellany of Sonnets, Satyrs, Drollery, Panegyricks, Elegies, &c. At the Instance, and Request of Several Friends, Times, and Occasions, Composed; and now at their command Collected, and Committed to the Press. By the Author, M. Stevenson
 
 

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Upon the Vertuous Brown (I know who) at the Popinjay.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Upon the Vertuous Brown (I know who) at the Popinjay.

Lillies and Roses, let who will go sute ye,
I'm for the lovely Brown, the lasting beauty.
Her Cheeks are Roses, need no thorny fence,
And there's no Lilly like her Innocence.
Their blossoms are but slaves to every blast;
But she's the same, when Spring and Autumn's past.
Her May's Eternal; She, when envious Time
Shall be no more, Is then but in her Prime,
She shall bid all these fading Formes adieu,
And Heaven and Earth shall for her sake be new.

55

You see the out-side of the Cabinet,
But 'tis within her crowned graces set.
Were you into an Angel but refin'd,
You then might read the Mirrour of her mind;
Not but the luster of her lovelyer face,
Need not, nay ought not to the best give place.
Her thoughts are chaster than the Virgin snow:
Diana for a Temple there might go.
Arabian Odours have her bosome blest,
The Phœnix there might come and find her Nest.
Such, so all pure is her Complexion known,
Sweeter than Cinnamon, softer than Down,
Nature in silence tells us to this brown,
Not the World's eye has tan'd her, but her own.
Her sweet symmetrick looks that so controul,
Are but the Mask, and shadow of her Soul.
Where all perfections to that height aspire,
Women may envy, but Men must admire.