1. THE Devill take those foolish Men, Who gave you first such powers; Wee stood on even grounds 'till then; If any odds, Creation made it ours. 2. For shame let these weak chaines be broke; Let's our slight bonds, like Sampson, tear; And nobly cast away that yoake, Which we nor our Fore-fathers ere could bear. 3. French Lawes forbid the Female Reign; Yet Love does them to slavery draw: Alas, if wee 'le our rights maintain, 'Tis all Mankind must make a Salique Law. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HIGH FLIGHT by JOHN GILLESPIE MAGEE JR. SOUTHERN PACIFIC by CARL SANDBURG SIC VITA by HENRY DAVID THOREAU THESMOPHORIAZUSAE: EURIPIDES by ARISTOPHANES UNSOPHISTICATED WISHES, BY MISS JEMINA INGOLDSBY, AGED 15 by RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM GHOST-BEREFT; A SCENE FROM BOGLAND IN WAR-TIME by JANE BARLOW SILENUS IN PROTEUS by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES MALIGNED MORTALITY by WILLIAM ROSE BENET TO A REDBREAST, THAT FLEW INTO A HOUSE ... by ELIZABETH BENTLEY |