Poems on Several Occasions Written by Charles Cotton |
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Epigramme de Monsieur des-Portes.
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Poems on Several Occasions | ||
165
Epigramme de Monsieur des-Portes.
Some four years ago I made Phillis an offer,
Provided she would be my Wh---re,
Of two thousand good Crowns to put in her Coffer,
And I think should have given her more.
Provided she would be my Wh---re,
Of two thousand good Crowns to put in her Coffer,
And I think should have given her more.
About two years after, a Message she sent me,
She was for a thousand my own,
But unless for an hundred she now would content me,
I sent her word I would have none.
She was for a thousand my own,
But unless for an hundred she now would content me,
I sent her word I would have none.
She fell to my price six or seven weeks after,
And then for a hundred would doe;
I then told her in vain she talk'd of the matter,
Than twenty no farther I'd goe.
And then for a hundred would doe;
I then told her in vain she talk'd of the matter,
Than twenty no farther I'd goe.
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T'other day for six Ducatoons she was willing,
Which I thought a great deal too dear,
And told her unless it would come for two shilling,
She must seek a Chapman elsewhere.
Which I thought a great deal too dear,
And told her unless it would come for two shilling,
She must seek a Chapman elsewhere.
This Morning she's come, and would fain buckle gratis,
But she's grown so fulsome a Wh---re,
That now methinks nothing a far dearer rate is,
Than all that I offer'd before.
But she's grown so fulsome a Wh---re,
That now methinks nothing a far dearer rate is,
Than all that I offer'd before.
Poems on Several Occasions | ||