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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.

[He that has led a cloister'd Life]

He that has led a cloister'd Life,
And has been long to Study bent,
If, in his Age, he takes a Wife
That's pert and young, will soon repent.
For Youth can never well agree
With an old Husband, grave and grey;
Nor Age a fit Companion be,
For a young Wife, that's brisk and gay.
Content is not preserv'd alone
By Wisdom, in a marry'd State;
There's something else that must be done,
Or she that has a Tongue, will prate.
'Tis dang'rous for a studious Mind,
Secluded long from Worldly Care,
To, in his graver Years, be join'd
In Marriage to the Young and Fair:
For tho' his Wife should chance to prove
Obedient, silent, kind and chaste,
Yet all the Joys he finds in Love,
Can't countervail his Pleasures past,

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For Ease and Freedom to the Breast,
That's to a studious Life inclin'd,
Affords the Soul that peaceful Rest,
Which few in Wedlock ever find.