Sylvia my Heart in wond'rous wise alarm'd, Aw'd without Sense, and without Beauty charm'd, But some odd Graces and fine Flights she had, Was just not ugly, and was just not mad; Her Tongue still run, on credit from her Eyes, More pert than witty, more a Wit than wise. Good Nature, she declar'd it, was her Scorn, Tho' 'twas by that alone she could be born. Affronting all, yet fond of a good Name, A Fool to Pleasure, yet a Slave to Fame; Now coy and studious in no Point to fall, Now all agog for D--y at a Ball: Now deep in Taylor and the Book of Martyrs, Now drinking Citron with his Gr-- and Ch-- Men, some to Business, some to Pleasure take, But ev'ry Woman's in her Soul a Rake. Frail, fev'rish Sex! their Fit now chills, now burns; Atheism and Superstition rule by Turns; And the meer Heathen in her carnal Part, Is still a sad good Christian at her Heart. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPRING NOTES FROM ROBIN HILL by HAYDEN CARRUTH FOR OUR BETTER GRACES by JAMES GALVIN ILLUSIONS by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON LETHE by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON GARDEN WIRELESS by CARL SANDBURG HYBRIDS OF WAR: A MORALITY POEM: 2. CAMBODIA by KAREN SWENSON |