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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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A. B. To an Old Woman was afraid He would steal her Daughter, who was ugly, and crooked as a Sythe, and Light withall.
 
 

A. B. To an Old Woman was afraid He would steal her Daughter, who was ugly, and crooked as a Sythe, and Light withall.

Steal, didst thou think? and such a one as she?
I'd hang my self then for such felonie:
My breeding makes me civil, even to them,
Whom piety commands me not contemn;
But to make serious love to such a one,
Pigmaleon-like, I'd sooner court a Stone.
Preterimperfect piece, who wou'd come nigh her?
Warpt a to side with her own hot desire.
Such a misshap't, such a ship-timber'd quean,
An ill-grown crotch, of the Forest of Dean.
A bunch-backt Camel, or a ragged Staff,
An object cou'd not make me love, but laugh?
She's Nature's Paradox, Form's hypocrite,
For she too crooked is, and yet too right.

122

I'm not for Dolphin stamp, nor will I be
Put off with such a Four-pence hal'pennie:
No, (Debora) thou Daughter of old Al'ce,
I love not high and low, a wench of Wales.
The second off-spring of the curled Ocean,
Whose Body shows its bendy-wavy motion.
Sure Nature thee did for some Pedlar make,
And gave thee this thy Budget at thy back.
Deb: thy affection on some other hurle,
I am not bent to wed a crooked Girle.
But, if against my will, thou wilt be mine?
We'l wed at Bow, and at the Dolphin Dine.
Of this, be sure I shall have scold enuff;
For, though she hold her tongue, her back will huff.