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Poems consisting of Epistles and Epigrams, Satyrs, Epitaphs and Elogies, Songs and Sonnets

With variety of other drolling Verses upon several Subjects. Composed by no body must know whom, and are to be had every body knows where, and for somebody knows what [by John Eliot]
 

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A Song.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A Song.

[Will you hear a true relation]

Will you hear a true relation
Of a Damsel, and her Lover?
She the nicest of a nation
He thought nothing dear to move her,
Costly things, Jewels, Rings,
He bestowed in plenty on her;
But her disdain increast his pain
Until he cry'd a Pox upon her.
Cupid heard his bitter Curse,
And to punish his fond errour
Caus'd her to purchase with his purse
That ill which is a Lovers terrour.
The unhappy maid was shortly paid
For her love with losse of Honour,
By a French Squire whom she did hire,
Who left her with the Pox upon her.

95

To her fist Lover then she yields,
Who to curse her had forgotten,
And thought him in the Elisian fields,
When he was in flesh half rotten,
Till aking bones, and waking groans
Made him wish he had forgone her,
While still she swears, the faults not hers
But his that wisht, a Pox upon her.