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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.

[The buxom Lady, bred in Town]

The buxom Lady, bred in Town,
Where Crowds of Beaus admire her,
And chase her Beauty up and down,
To shew how they desire her,
Is so bewitch'd to London Streets,
Where Villains shine in Splendor;
And ev'ry wealthy Fool she meets
Maintains his Miss in Grandeur,
That she disdains a Country-Life,
And all its vertuous Pleasures,
Because in Town, each Lady Wife
May take her own loose Measures

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The Husbands revel, whore, and drink;
Wives keep their Beaus and Nisies:
Thus all grow wicked, so they wink
At one another's Vices.
That he who does to London come,
To wed a Town bred Woman,
Had better range the Woods at Home,
With Joler, and with Bowman.
For Sodom's Daughters can't conform
To Pleasures that are rural:
But like to live where Blockheads swarm,
And loving Sisters whore all.