THEWHORE:A POEM.

TThanksto the age, the satyrizing MuseHas themes sufficient—where she will to chuse;Whither among the vulgar scenes of strife,Or those renown’d forVicein higher life.Lord, Duke, or Duchess, might the theme enhance,And shew the worst of crimes—without romance.St. James’s, orSt. Giles’s, will supplyEnough of subjects—in Iniquity.WHOREis my theme, ye sisters all attend,Give your applause, and be a sister’s friend;If this ye do, and cast a fav’ring eye,ThoseSons of Whores, the Critics, I defy.Ofall the crimes condemn’d in women-kind,Whore, in the catalogue, the first you’ll find;This vulgar term is in the mouth of allAn epithet, on every female’s fall.And what’s a Whore? Go ask the nations round;Is it an empty name, and nought but sound?Is it, above all other sins, the worst?By man despised, and byGodaccurs’d?If that’s the case, and scripture we believe,What was the crime alledg’d to grandamEve?What was the fruit the Tree of Knowledge shew’d,And made her break her promise to herGod?What in the serpent could o’er her prevail;Was the greatEVILin his head orTAIL?The Devil himself must clear up the dispute,Who knew the virtue of the fatal fruit.Butwhat’s aWHOREin life?—pray let us find,If possible we can, among mankind.A woman, who the worst of thoughts debase,All void of shame, of decency, and grace;One who for hire her person will dispose,And take, for need, each passer-by that goes.Is, then, necessity the only plea?Ye sisters in high life, come tell to me;High fed, high bred, high marry’d too, indeed,Do you not sometimeswhoreto mend the breed?Necessity, with you, can have no claim;Wants you have none—unless you knowthat same;Your spouse, perhaps, lies snoring all the night,While you are wishing for the soft delight.Is impotence the case?—heOLD, youYOUNG,Weak in his back, while you are stout and strong;If hecan’teat, pray why should you be starv’d?Thecraving Womb of Naturemust be serv’d.This Newtonknew, and like a cunning elf,As spousy could not carve—she help’d herself.But Grosv’nor, what could be the case with you?‘Good lack! my lord was to my bed untrue;‘Where’er he went he sought some lew’d embrace,‘Neglected me for ev’ry newer face;‘In silence long I mourn’d my hapless fate,‘At length determin’d to retaliate.‘Yet to no mean amour did I descend;‘A Prince my lover, and a Prince my friend.‘Who would not wish for such a lot as mine?‘Who would not be aroyal concubine?‘Envy’d by ev’ry lady I could see,‘Who, if notWHORES, would fain be so—like me.’And yet, mistakenGrosvenor, you findHis royal vows and oaths were all but wind;He’s satisfied himself, and comes no more,While for your comfort—you’ve the name ofWHORE.Poor Ligonierwas, too, condemn’d by fateTo find at last an insufficient mate;One who could not her eager joys pursue,Andpleasures standardraise unto the view;Therefore the staff she took into her hand,And had a reg’ment at her own command.Worsley, of late, has prov’d strong Nature’s bent,And try’d with many—for her own content;Her willing cuckold she has nicely bam’d,Who, for his vile compliance, should bed——d.The meanest scoundrel, sure, in human life,Is he who to another lets his wife;Or basely does at lustful acts connive,That he maytippersto hishornscontrive;Plead ign’rance, tho’ he knows it all the while,That hiswife’sfriend, of gold, he may beguile.Butsay you, ‘Spouses thus might be in fault;’Consider what good lessons you’d beentaught;From earliest youth what tutors you have had,That you might rise the joy ofMamandDad;VirtueandPrudence, names of mighty force,You work’d upon your samplers of course;No sights unseemly ever struck your eyes,But all was done to make you good and wise.’Twas, sure, theforce of Nature!that was all,Which thus could make your dignities to fall.Had you been brought up in some foreign land,Where sacred monast’ries around expand,Suchslipp’ry tricksyou surely ne’er had done,Each in her mind, no doubt, had been a Nun.Ofthat I doubt, from stories I have heard,And one I’ve ready for you now prepar’d.A tenderVirgin, by herParentswill,(And virgins must their parents hopes fulfil)Was to a cloyster in her bloom consign’d,(Tho’ she had no such wishes in her mind)To fast and pray, instead of patch and paint,And to be—Godknows how, a very saint;Join her soft voice unto the organ’s note,And all her thoughts to Heav’n alone must float;The shadowy veil must hide her lovely face,Where joy sat smiling with each charming grace;Knees bent, eyes lifted, hands in order join’d,Must shew her purest sanctity of mind.Yetall this discipline was ill bestow’d,Her youthful mind still thought of flesh and blood;And, to conceal it, still she strove in vain;She often in her cell would loud complainHow hard the lot insisted to obey,And wish’d some man would steal her soon away;More than her beads she then would him adore,And be contented with the name ofWHORE.TheAbbess heard her as she pass’d by chance,And fancy’d she had got some vile romance;Knock’d at the cell, and found her daughter there,With not a book—unless a book of pray’r;She wonder’d much, and told the virgin so,Who did not hide the truth, but let her know.Amaz’d the matron lifted up her eyes,And shew’d her horror by her vast surprize.‘O! shame to all that’s pious and that’s good,‘What wild-fire’s this which rages in your blood;‘’Tis, sure, dictated by some imp of Hell!‘You must be mad!—Pray tell me, Are you well?‘Your understanding must be gone astray;‘I’ll call the Doctor to you.—Well-a-day!’TheNun persisted that her mind was right,That she was in her perfect senses quite;AndNature, in her wishes, still prevail’d.Love fill’d her thoughts—and that was all that ail’d.Againthe pious Abbess strove, in vain,Her wicked wants and wishes to explain;Bid her take pattern by her sisterPrue,Who was to holy exercises true;Who ne’er at morn. or evening pray’r, was foundTo cast one carnal eye or thought around?But ev’ry sense was calm, each wish was even,And all her joy, and all her hope in Heav’n.Thetender maiden look’d again and sigh’d,And to her mental mother thus reply’d:—‘Prue, that you mention, as I’ve heard her say,‘Was, in her younger days, entic’d away;‘The strong temptation she could not withstand,‘But yielded up atNature’s high command.‘Long with a youth indalliancepass’d her life,‘Had all the joys of love—tho’ not a wife;‘And when he left her for a real bride,‘She did another for herself provide;‘Another after that, when that was gone,‘And so, for many years, in joy went on;‘’Till tir’d ofsportingin the am’rous way,‘She turn’d aNun, at last, to fast and pray.‘By her example let me then proceed;‘On joy and pleasure let my wishes feed;‘And when that I’ve been cloy’d with love like her,‘Pray’rs, and a Nunnery, I may prefer.’Wasnot the Virgin, tell me sisters pure,Within her mind aHARLOT?—Certain sure.Such, in our boarding-schools, we often find,Where, to improve their morals, they’re design’d:Yet Lewdness, there, is found among the train,And Virtue faintly does her rights maintain;The Dancing-Master, and the Frizeur too,Thepleasing sportsofVenusbring to view;Big belliesandelopementswill take place,AndWHORESalike be found in ev’ry place.Butwhy, by me can never be devis’d,AWHOREshould be so horridly despis’d;Why, when by all, throughout the world, they’re us’d!Why they should be so cruelly abus’d.Thepulpit-thumper rails against aWHORE,And damns theProstitute!—What can he more?Justice pursues her to the very cart,Where, for her folly, she is doom’d to smart.Whips,Gaols, Diseases! all theWHOREassail,And yet, I fancy,WHORESwill never fail.Whatis the reasonWHORESare so in vogue?Why, faith, to gain a true one, ask eachRogue.TheveryPriest, who dares so much decry,And holds his doctrine up so very high,Will, from the pulpit, cast a side-long glance,To damn the tenets which he dares advance;And e’er, perhaps, he goes to evening pray’r,Will take a bottle with some willing fair;Will to her breasts his saint-like hands apply,And gaze upon her with lascivious eye,In pleasure’s pulpit then will mount, and preachA forceful doctrine, which he dares not teach;Then, sanctify’d, will to his flock amain,Hem, stroke his band—and rail atWHORESagain.The Justicetoo, who puts the laws in force,Must seem a tyrant over us, of course;Produce each hum-drum act, from bad to worse,Made by old fumblers, for theHARLOT’s curse.Bridewell’s the sentence, then, to all who’re poor,But,gold well tipp’d, will save theflashyWHORE;And the good magistrate some clause will findTo soften evidence unto his mind;Perhaps at night, considering the case,Indulge his feelings in a close embrace;Will, at the tavern, circulate his glass,And take, with glee, his bottle and his lass.Goto theCommons[1], to theArchesgo,Where, for divorces, people sue, we know.The Judges and the Proctors, so devout,Would, with the culprit, wish to have a bout.Adultery, tho’ call’d a crying sin,Without they’re paid, would not be worth a pin:They’ll sell you licences to get a bride,And, on complaint, divorces have beside.O happy land! where such good laws remain,That you may wed, and be unwed again;That sacred knot, recorded so on high!Those who have money may with ease untie;Yet there’s no sister ever this deplores,Because it adds so to the list ofWHORES.[1]Doctor’s Commons.Askat that place where Lords and Commons sit,To shew at once their eloquence and wit;Who rule the nation, and its laws provide,Lift high our fame, the legislation guide;From the Right Rev’rend, in the prelate’s place,The noble Count, or more exalted Grace:Or of the members on the lower side,Whose consequence by none can be deny’d;AskF——xandS——dw——h; aye, and many more,If they, at times, have each not had aWHORE?Thequestion’s foolish, ev’ry one must guessThey all are guilty—either more or less!Were they but stigmatiz’d, as women are,Condemn’d a load of infamy to bear,Their Honours, and Right Honourables too,Would fear to bring their faces forth to view.Why then should we be thus condemn’d alone,When they are guilty, equal, ev’ry one;Were there no men, noWHORESthere sure could be,They strive to make us so, in each degree.Havewe a face that’s exquisitely fair,They spread their nets, that beauty to ensnare;Is modesty and innocence our guide,To try to ruin it is all their pride;If we are humble, they our hopes will raise,Strive to undo us still, a thousand ways;Gold, flattery, and treach’ry, they employ,The object which delights them to destroy;Then cast aside, neglected or forgot,We’re doom’d to pine, to languish, and to rot:Or if, when such delusive arts are o’er,We go to others—each is then aWHORE!YeRogues of Fortune, and ye Rogues of Pow’r,Who ruin females in the guardless hour;Who may beSonsofWHORES, for what you know,Attend to what my artless pen can shew.Notfar from Town, and in a rural place,Where Nature shone with ev’ry pleasing grace;Where rising hills gave rapture to the sight,With flocks, whose fleeces were all snowy white;Beneath, where lawns extended wide around,And silver murm’ring rivulets were found;There in a humble, tho’ not mean, estate,I drew my being, as ordain’d by fate.My parents, tho’ not born to wealth and pride,The markets still with various things supply’d;Industrious both, they happ’ly found the gainsWere equal to their wishes and their pains.I was their only child, and form’d to bless,I always added to their happiness;They saw my person ev’ry one engage,Beheld my sense increasing with my age;Each Sunday to my dress they’d something add,For pleasing me was making of them glad;A diff’rent ribband bound my flowing hair,Wav’d in my hat, and flutter’d in the air;Thus simply pleas’d, and innocent likewise,I caught, at last,Lothario’s wanton eyes.Aboutfifteen, my face had Nature’s bloom,My lips enticing, and my breath perfume!My eyes, like sloes, were glossy, black, and bright!My shape was slender, and my steps were light!Hesaw me tripping o’er the dewy lawn,Brisk as the lambkins, or the bounding fawn;He hail’d my beauties in so soft a speech,Which sure a heart less kind than mine might reach;I blush’d, he follow’d, met me ev’ry day,’Till I became, at last, his destin’d prey.Yet, oh! what vows, what oaths, did he prepare,Before I fell into his baneful snare;He call’d me wife, swore I should be his bride,With protestations, very high beside;Beg’d to my parents I would nothing tell,If that I wish’d his love and person well.Hisfriends were pow’rful, and I soon comply’d,For what he ask’d, then could not be deny’d;I thought that time would reconcile my fate,And lift me far above my present state;Such fatal folly I must still deplore,No wife am I, but aNEGLECTEDWHORE!Fruitionsoon my lover’s passion cool’d,His absence let me know how I was fool’d;My heaving womb a diff’rent weight confest,My parents saw it, and were much distrest:I told the cause;—they turn’d me out of door,And made we wander forth a wretchedWHORE!Tofaithless him my ruin I must lay,He first seduc’d and did my heart betray:—High in a diff’rent sphere he took a wife;O! may she be to him eternal strife;May she to lustful passion give her heart!That ev’ry fool, with him, may have a part;Tho’ higher born, no diff’rence I can seeShe should not be aWHORE—as well as me.ThatWHORESare many, certainly you’ll find,Is owing to the baseness of mankind;Tho’ inclination oft’ our passions sway,’Tis man, vile man! first teaches us the way.Byhim we first are taught each vicious art,Each crime which can corrupt and spoil the heart.Is any female fond of dress, or play,(And where is one that is not?—you will say)Her fav’rite passion he will strive to please,And work into her folly by degrees;Like vermin in a building, undermine,’Till the whole pile falls down—his whole design;Then leaves the ruin he himself has made,Without one spark of gratitude display’d.Nopitying eye beholds the hapless fair,She’s left to Death, Diseases, and Despair!Nature cries out, and hunger must be fed,She now must turn a prostitute for bread;Her name is blasted, friendless left, and poor,Tell me what can she do?—why be aWHORE.Lew’d scenes, and lew’d discourse, comes next in play;Deeds dark as night, asham’d to meet the day!Thus they proceed along, from bad to worse,Launch the broad oath! repeat the dreadful curse!’Till, on a laystall, she resigns her breath,By all unpityed, to the arms of death!Yetev’ry one of feeling must deplore,That man, vile man, first made the wretch aWHORE!

TThanksto the age, the satyrizing MuseHas themes sufficient—where she will to chuse;Whither among the vulgar scenes of strife,Or those renown’d forVicein higher life.Lord, Duke, or Duchess, might the theme enhance,And shew the worst of crimes—without romance.St. James’s, orSt. Giles’s, will supplyEnough of subjects—in Iniquity.WHOREis my theme, ye sisters all attend,Give your applause, and be a sister’s friend;If this ye do, and cast a fav’ring eye,ThoseSons of Whores, the Critics, I defy.Ofall the crimes condemn’d in women-kind,Whore, in the catalogue, the first you’ll find;This vulgar term is in the mouth of allAn epithet, on every female’s fall.And what’s a Whore? Go ask the nations round;Is it an empty name, and nought but sound?Is it, above all other sins, the worst?By man despised, and byGodaccurs’d?If that’s the case, and scripture we believe,What was the crime alledg’d to grandamEve?What was the fruit the Tree of Knowledge shew’d,And made her break her promise to herGod?What in the serpent could o’er her prevail;Was the greatEVILin his head orTAIL?The Devil himself must clear up the dispute,Who knew the virtue of the fatal fruit.Butwhat’s aWHOREin life?—pray let us find,If possible we can, among mankind.A woman, who the worst of thoughts debase,All void of shame, of decency, and grace;One who for hire her person will dispose,And take, for need, each passer-by that goes.Is, then, necessity the only plea?Ye sisters in high life, come tell to me;High fed, high bred, high marry’d too, indeed,Do you not sometimeswhoreto mend the breed?Necessity, with you, can have no claim;Wants you have none—unless you knowthat same;Your spouse, perhaps, lies snoring all the night,While you are wishing for the soft delight.Is impotence the case?—heOLD, youYOUNG,Weak in his back, while you are stout and strong;If hecan’teat, pray why should you be starv’d?Thecraving Womb of Naturemust be serv’d.This Newtonknew, and like a cunning elf,As spousy could not carve—she help’d herself.But Grosv’nor, what could be the case with you?‘Good lack! my lord was to my bed untrue;‘Where’er he went he sought some lew’d embrace,‘Neglected me for ev’ry newer face;‘In silence long I mourn’d my hapless fate,‘At length determin’d to retaliate.‘Yet to no mean amour did I descend;‘A Prince my lover, and a Prince my friend.‘Who would not wish for such a lot as mine?‘Who would not be aroyal concubine?‘Envy’d by ev’ry lady I could see,‘Who, if notWHORES, would fain be so—like me.’And yet, mistakenGrosvenor, you findHis royal vows and oaths were all but wind;He’s satisfied himself, and comes no more,While for your comfort—you’ve the name ofWHORE.Poor Ligonierwas, too, condemn’d by fateTo find at last an insufficient mate;One who could not her eager joys pursue,Andpleasures standardraise unto the view;Therefore the staff she took into her hand,And had a reg’ment at her own command.Worsley, of late, has prov’d strong Nature’s bent,And try’d with many—for her own content;Her willing cuckold she has nicely bam’d,Who, for his vile compliance, should bed——d.The meanest scoundrel, sure, in human life,Is he who to another lets his wife;Or basely does at lustful acts connive,That he maytippersto hishornscontrive;Plead ign’rance, tho’ he knows it all the while,That hiswife’sfriend, of gold, he may beguile.Butsay you, ‘Spouses thus might be in fault;’Consider what good lessons you’d beentaught;From earliest youth what tutors you have had,That you might rise the joy ofMamandDad;VirtueandPrudence, names of mighty force,You work’d upon your samplers of course;No sights unseemly ever struck your eyes,But all was done to make you good and wise.’Twas, sure, theforce of Nature!that was all,Which thus could make your dignities to fall.Had you been brought up in some foreign land,Where sacred monast’ries around expand,Suchslipp’ry tricksyou surely ne’er had done,Each in her mind, no doubt, had been a Nun.Ofthat I doubt, from stories I have heard,And one I’ve ready for you now prepar’d.A tenderVirgin, by herParentswill,(And virgins must their parents hopes fulfil)Was to a cloyster in her bloom consign’d,(Tho’ she had no such wishes in her mind)To fast and pray, instead of patch and paint,And to be—Godknows how, a very saint;Join her soft voice unto the organ’s note,And all her thoughts to Heav’n alone must float;The shadowy veil must hide her lovely face,Where joy sat smiling with each charming grace;Knees bent, eyes lifted, hands in order join’d,Must shew her purest sanctity of mind.Yetall this discipline was ill bestow’d,Her youthful mind still thought of flesh and blood;And, to conceal it, still she strove in vain;She often in her cell would loud complainHow hard the lot insisted to obey,And wish’d some man would steal her soon away;More than her beads she then would him adore,And be contented with the name ofWHORE.TheAbbess heard her as she pass’d by chance,And fancy’d she had got some vile romance;Knock’d at the cell, and found her daughter there,With not a book—unless a book of pray’r;She wonder’d much, and told the virgin so,Who did not hide the truth, but let her know.Amaz’d the matron lifted up her eyes,And shew’d her horror by her vast surprize.‘O! shame to all that’s pious and that’s good,‘What wild-fire’s this which rages in your blood;‘’Tis, sure, dictated by some imp of Hell!‘You must be mad!—Pray tell me, Are you well?‘Your understanding must be gone astray;‘I’ll call the Doctor to you.—Well-a-day!’TheNun persisted that her mind was right,That she was in her perfect senses quite;AndNature, in her wishes, still prevail’d.Love fill’d her thoughts—and that was all that ail’d.Againthe pious Abbess strove, in vain,Her wicked wants and wishes to explain;Bid her take pattern by her sisterPrue,Who was to holy exercises true;Who ne’er at morn. or evening pray’r, was foundTo cast one carnal eye or thought around?But ev’ry sense was calm, each wish was even,And all her joy, and all her hope in Heav’n.Thetender maiden look’d again and sigh’d,And to her mental mother thus reply’d:—‘Prue, that you mention, as I’ve heard her say,‘Was, in her younger days, entic’d away;‘The strong temptation she could not withstand,‘But yielded up atNature’s high command.‘Long with a youth indalliancepass’d her life,‘Had all the joys of love—tho’ not a wife;‘And when he left her for a real bride,‘She did another for herself provide;‘Another after that, when that was gone,‘And so, for many years, in joy went on;‘’Till tir’d ofsportingin the am’rous way,‘She turn’d aNun, at last, to fast and pray.‘By her example let me then proceed;‘On joy and pleasure let my wishes feed;‘And when that I’ve been cloy’d with love like her,‘Pray’rs, and a Nunnery, I may prefer.’Wasnot the Virgin, tell me sisters pure,Within her mind aHARLOT?—Certain sure.Such, in our boarding-schools, we often find,Where, to improve their morals, they’re design’d:Yet Lewdness, there, is found among the train,And Virtue faintly does her rights maintain;The Dancing-Master, and the Frizeur too,Thepleasing sportsofVenusbring to view;Big belliesandelopementswill take place,AndWHORESalike be found in ev’ry place.Butwhy, by me can never be devis’d,AWHOREshould be so horridly despis’d;Why, when by all, throughout the world, they’re us’d!Why they should be so cruelly abus’d.Thepulpit-thumper rails against aWHORE,And damns theProstitute!—What can he more?Justice pursues her to the very cart,Where, for her folly, she is doom’d to smart.Whips,Gaols, Diseases! all theWHOREassail,And yet, I fancy,WHORESwill never fail.Whatis the reasonWHORESare so in vogue?Why, faith, to gain a true one, ask eachRogue.TheveryPriest, who dares so much decry,And holds his doctrine up so very high,Will, from the pulpit, cast a side-long glance,To damn the tenets which he dares advance;And e’er, perhaps, he goes to evening pray’r,Will take a bottle with some willing fair;Will to her breasts his saint-like hands apply,And gaze upon her with lascivious eye,In pleasure’s pulpit then will mount, and preachA forceful doctrine, which he dares not teach;Then, sanctify’d, will to his flock amain,Hem, stroke his band—and rail atWHORESagain.The Justicetoo, who puts the laws in force,Must seem a tyrant over us, of course;Produce each hum-drum act, from bad to worse,Made by old fumblers, for theHARLOT’s curse.Bridewell’s the sentence, then, to all who’re poor,But,gold well tipp’d, will save theflashyWHORE;And the good magistrate some clause will findTo soften evidence unto his mind;Perhaps at night, considering the case,Indulge his feelings in a close embrace;Will, at the tavern, circulate his glass,And take, with glee, his bottle and his lass.Goto theCommons[1], to theArchesgo,Where, for divorces, people sue, we know.The Judges and the Proctors, so devout,Would, with the culprit, wish to have a bout.Adultery, tho’ call’d a crying sin,Without they’re paid, would not be worth a pin:They’ll sell you licences to get a bride,And, on complaint, divorces have beside.O happy land! where such good laws remain,That you may wed, and be unwed again;That sacred knot, recorded so on high!Those who have money may with ease untie;Yet there’s no sister ever this deplores,Because it adds so to the list ofWHORES.[1]Doctor’s Commons.Askat that place where Lords and Commons sit,To shew at once their eloquence and wit;Who rule the nation, and its laws provide,Lift high our fame, the legislation guide;From the Right Rev’rend, in the prelate’s place,The noble Count, or more exalted Grace:Or of the members on the lower side,Whose consequence by none can be deny’d;AskF——xandS——dw——h; aye, and many more,If they, at times, have each not had aWHORE?Thequestion’s foolish, ev’ry one must guessThey all are guilty—either more or less!Were they but stigmatiz’d, as women are,Condemn’d a load of infamy to bear,Their Honours, and Right Honourables too,Would fear to bring their faces forth to view.Why then should we be thus condemn’d alone,When they are guilty, equal, ev’ry one;Were there no men, noWHORESthere sure could be,They strive to make us so, in each degree.Havewe a face that’s exquisitely fair,They spread their nets, that beauty to ensnare;Is modesty and innocence our guide,To try to ruin it is all their pride;If we are humble, they our hopes will raise,Strive to undo us still, a thousand ways;Gold, flattery, and treach’ry, they employ,The object which delights them to destroy;Then cast aside, neglected or forgot,We’re doom’d to pine, to languish, and to rot:Or if, when such delusive arts are o’er,We go to others—each is then aWHORE!YeRogues of Fortune, and ye Rogues of Pow’r,Who ruin females in the guardless hour;Who may beSonsofWHORES, for what you know,Attend to what my artless pen can shew.Notfar from Town, and in a rural place,Where Nature shone with ev’ry pleasing grace;Where rising hills gave rapture to the sight,With flocks, whose fleeces were all snowy white;Beneath, where lawns extended wide around,And silver murm’ring rivulets were found;There in a humble, tho’ not mean, estate,I drew my being, as ordain’d by fate.My parents, tho’ not born to wealth and pride,The markets still with various things supply’d;Industrious both, they happ’ly found the gainsWere equal to their wishes and their pains.I was their only child, and form’d to bless,I always added to their happiness;They saw my person ev’ry one engage,Beheld my sense increasing with my age;Each Sunday to my dress they’d something add,For pleasing me was making of them glad;A diff’rent ribband bound my flowing hair,Wav’d in my hat, and flutter’d in the air;Thus simply pleas’d, and innocent likewise,I caught, at last,Lothario’s wanton eyes.Aboutfifteen, my face had Nature’s bloom,My lips enticing, and my breath perfume!My eyes, like sloes, were glossy, black, and bright!My shape was slender, and my steps were light!Hesaw me tripping o’er the dewy lawn,Brisk as the lambkins, or the bounding fawn;He hail’d my beauties in so soft a speech,Which sure a heart less kind than mine might reach;I blush’d, he follow’d, met me ev’ry day,’Till I became, at last, his destin’d prey.Yet, oh! what vows, what oaths, did he prepare,Before I fell into his baneful snare;He call’d me wife, swore I should be his bride,With protestations, very high beside;Beg’d to my parents I would nothing tell,If that I wish’d his love and person well.Hisfriends were pow’rful, and I soon comply’d,For what he ask’d, then could not be deny’d;I thought that time would reconcile my fate,And lift me far above my present state;Such fatal folly I must still deplore,No wife am I, but aNEGLECTEDWHORE!Fruitionsoon my lover’s passion cool’d,His absence let me know how I was fool’d;My heaving womb a diff’rent weight confest,My parents saw it, and were much distrest:I told the cause;—they turn’d me out of door,And made we wander forth a wretchedWHORE!Tofaithless him my ruin I must lay,He first seduc’d and did my heart betray:—High in a diff’rent sphere he took a wife;O! may she be to him eternal strife;May she to lustful passion give her heart!That ev’ry fool, with him, may have a part;Tho’ higher born, no diff’rence I can seeShe should not be aWHORE—as well as me.ThatWHORESare many, certainly you’ll find,Is owing to the baseness of mankind;Tho’ inclination oft’ our passions sway,’Tis man, vile man! first teaches us the way.Byhim we first are taught each vicious art,Each crime which can corrupt and spoil the heart.Is any female fond of dress, or play,(And where is one that is not?—you will say)Her fav’rite passion he will strive to please,And work into her folly by degrees;Like vermin in a building, undermine,’Till the whole pile falls down—his whole design;Then leaves the ruin he himself has made,Without one spark of gratitude display’d.Nopitying eye beholds the hapless fair,She’s left to Death, Diseases, and Despair!Nature cries out, and hunger must be fed,She now must turn a prostitute for bread;Her name is blasted, friendless left, and poor,Tell me what can she do?—why be aWHORE.Lew’d scenes, and lew’d discourse, comes next in play;Deeds dark as night, asham’d to meet the day!Thus they proceed along, from bad to worse,Launch the broad oath! repeat the dreadful curse!’Till, on a laystall, she resigns her breath,By all unpityed, to the arms of death!Yetev’ry one of feeling must deplore,That man, vile man, first made the wretch aWHORE!

TThanksto the age, the satyrizing MuseHas themes sufficient—where she will to chuse;Whither among the vulgar scenes of strife,Or those renown’d forVicein higher life.Lord, Duke, or Duchess, might the theme enhance,And shew the worst of crimes—without romance.St. James’s, orSt. Giles’s, will supplyEnough of subjects—in Iniquity.WHOREis my theme, ye sisters all attend,Give your applause, and be a sister’s friend;If this ye do, and cast a fav’ring eye,ThoseSons of Whores, the Critics, I defy.

TThanksto the age, the satyrizing Muse

Has themes sufficient—where she will to chuse;

Whither among the vulgar scenes of strife,

Or those renown’d forVicein higher life.

Lord, Duke, or Duchess, might the theme enhance,

And shew the worst of crimes—without romance.

St. James’s, orSt. Giles’s, will supply

Enough of subjects—in Iniquity.

WHOREis my theme, ye sisters all attend,

Give your applause, and be a sister’s friend;

If this ye do, and cast a fav’ring eye,

ThoseSons of Whores, the Critics, I defy.

Ofall the crimes condemn’d in women-kind,Whore, in the catalogue, the first you’ll find;This vulgar term is in the mouth of allAn epithet, on every female’s fall.And what’s a Whore? Go ask the nations round;Is it an empty name, and nought but sound?Is it, above all other sins, the worst?By man despised, and byGodaccurs’d?If that’s the case, and scripture we believe,What was the crime alledg’d to grandamEve?What was the fruit the Tree of Knowledge shew’d,And made her break her promise to herGod?What in the serpent could o’er her prevail;Was the greatEVILin his head orTAIL?The Devil himself must clear up the dispute,Who knew the virtue of the fatal fruit.

Ofall the crimes condemn’d in women-kind,

Whore, in the catalogue, the first you’ll find;

This vulgar term is in the mouth of all

An epithet, on every female’s fall.

And what’s a Whore? Go ask the nations round;

Is it an empty name, and nought but sound?

Is it, above all other sins, the worst?

By man despised, and byGodaccurs’d?

If that’s the case, and scripture we believe,

What was the crime alledg’d to grandamEve?

What was the fruit the Tree of Knowledge shew’d,

And made her break her promise to herGod?

What in the serpent could o’er her prevail;

Was the greatEVILin his head orTAIL?

The Devil himself must clear up the dispute,

Who knew the virtue of the fatal fruit.

Butwhat’s aWHOREin life?—pray let us find,If possible we can, among mankind.A woman, who the worst of thoughts debase,All void of shame, of decency, and grace;One who for hire her person will dispose,And take, for need, each passer-by that goes.

Butwhat’s aWHOREin life?—pray let us find,

If possible we can, among mankind.

A woman, who the worst of thoughts debase,

All void of shame, of decency, and grace;

One who for hire her person will dispose,

And take, for need, each passer-by that goes.

Is, then, necessity the only plea?Ye sisters in high life, come tell to me;High fed, high bred, high marry’d too, indeed,Do you not sometimeswhoreto mend the breed?Necessity, with you, can have no claim;Wants you have none—unless you knowthat same;Your spouse, perhaps, lies snoring all the night,While you are wishing for the soft delight.Is impotence the case?—heOLD, youYOUNG,Weak in his back, while you are stout and strong;If hecan’teat, pray why should you be starv’d?Thecraving Womb of Naturemust be serv’d.

Is, then, necessity the only plea?

Ye sisters in high life, come tell to me;

High fed, high bred, high marry’d too, indeed,

Do you not sometimeswhoreto mend the breed?

Necessity, with you, can have no claim;

Wants you have none—unless you knowthat same;

Your spouse, perhaps, lies snoring all the night,

While you are wishing for the soft delight.

Is impotence the case?—heOLD, youYOUNG,

Weak in his back, while you are stout and strong;

If hecan’teat, pray why should you be starv’d?

Thecraving Womb of Naturemust be serv’d.

This Newtonknew, and like a cunning elf,As spousy could not carve—she help’d herself.

This Newtonknew, and like a cunning elf,

As spousy could not carve—she help’d herself.

But Grosv’nor, what could be the case with you?‘Good lack! my lord was to my bed untrue;‘Where’er he went he sought some lew’d embrace,‘Neglected me for ev’ry newer face;‘In silence long I mourn’d my hapless fate,‘At length determin’d to retaliate.‘Yet to no mean amour did I descend;‘A Prince my lover, and a Prince my friend.‘Who would not wish for such a lot as mine?‘Who would not be aroyal concubine?‘Envy’d by ev’ry lady I could see,‘Who, if notWHORES, would fain be so—like me.’And yet, mistakenGrosvenor, you findHis royal vows and oaths were all but wind;He’s satisfied himself, and comes no more,While for your comfort—you’ve the name ofWHORE.

But Grosv’nor, what could be the case with you?

‘Good lack! my lord was to my bed untrue;

‘Where’er he went he sought some lew’d embrace,

‘Neglected me for ev’ry newer face;

‘In silence long I mourn’d my hapless fate,

‘At length determin’d to retaliate.

‘Yet to no mean amour did I descend;

‘A Prince my lover, and a Prince my friend.

‘Who would not wish for such a lot as mine?

‘Who would not be aroyal concubine?

‘Envy’d by ev’ry lady I could see,

‘Who, if notWHORES, would fain be so—like me.’

And yet, mistakenGrosvenor, you find

His royal vows and oaths were all but wind;

He’s satisfied himself, and comes no more,

While for your comfort—you’ve the name ofWHORE.

Poor Ligonierwas, too, condemn’d by fateTo find at last an insufficient mate;One who could not her eager joys pursue,Andpleasures standardraise unto the view;Therefore the staff she took into her hand,And had a reg’ment at her own command.

Poor Ligonierwas, too, condemn’d by fate

To find at last an insufficient mate;

One who could not her eager joys pursue,

Andpleasures standardraise unto the view;

Therefore the staff she took into her hand,

And had a reg’ment at her own command.

Worsley, of late, has prov’d strong Nature’s bent,And try’d with many—for her own content;Her willing cuckold she has nicely bam’d,Who, for his vile compliance, should bed——d.The meanest scoundrel, sure, in human life,Is he who to another lets his wife;Or basely does at lustful acts connive,That he maytippersto hishornscontrive;Plead ign’rance, tho’ he knows it all the while,That hiswife’sfriend, of gold, he may beguile.

Worsley, of late, has prov’d strong Nature’s bent,

And try’d with many—for her own content;

Her willing cuckold she has nicely bam’d,

Who, for his vile compliance, should bed——d.

The meanest scoundrel, sure, in human life,

Is he who to another lets his wife;

Or basely does at lustful acts connive,

That he maytippersto hishornscontrive;

Plead ign’rance, tho’ he knows it all the while,

That hiswife’sfriend, of gold, he may beguile.

Butsay you, ‘Spouses thus might be in fault;’Consider what good lessons you’d beentaught;From earliest youth what tutors you have had,That you might rise the joy ofMamandDad;VirtueandPrudence, names of mighty force,You work’d upon your samplers of course;No sights unseemly ever struck your eyes,But all was done to make you good and wise.’Twas, sure, theforce of Nature!that was all,Which thus could make your dignities to fall.Had you been brought up in some foreign land,Where sacred monast’ries around expand,Suchslipp’ry tricksyou surely ne’er had done,Each in her mind, no doubt, had been a Nun.

Butsay you, ‘Spouses thus might be in fault;’

Consider what good lessons you’d beentaught;

From earliest youth what tutors you have had,

That you might rise the joy ofMamandDad;

VirtueandPrudence, names of mighty force,

You work’d upon your samplers of course;

No sights unseemly ever struck your eyes,

But all was done to make you good and wise.

’Twas, sure, theforce of Nature!that was all,

Which thus could make your dignities to fall.

Had you been brought up in some foreign land,

Where sacred monast’ries around expand,

Suchslipp’ry tricksyou surely ne’er had done,

Each in her mind, no doubt, had been a Nun.

Ofthat I doubt, from stories I have heard,And one I’ve ready for you now prepar’d.

Ofthat I doubt, from stories I have heard,

And one I’ve ready for you now prepar’d.

A tenderVirgin, by herParentswill,(And virgins must their parents hopes fulfil)Was to a cloyster in her bloom consign’d,(Tho’ she had no such wishes in her mind)To fast and pray, instead of patch and paint,And to be—Godknows how, a very saint;Join her soft voice unto the organ’s note,And all her thoughts to Heav’n alone must float;The shadowy veil must hide her lovely face,Where joy sat smiling with each charming grace;Knees bent, eyes lifted, hands in order join’d,Must shew her purest sanctity of mind.

A tenderVirgin, by herParentswill,

(And virgins must their parents hopes fulfil)

Was to a cloyster in her bloom consign’d,

(Tho’ she had no such wishes in her mind)

To fast and pray, instead of patch and paint,

And to be—Godknows how, a very saint;

Join her soft voice unto the organ’s note,

And all her thoughts to Heav’n alone must float;

The shadowy veil must hide her lovely face,

Where joy sat smiling with each charming grace;

Knees bent, eyes lifted, hands in order join’d,

Must shew her purest sanctity of mind.

Yetall this discipline was ill bestow’d,Her youthful mind still thought of flesh and blood;And, to conceal it, still she strove in vain;She often in her cell would loud complainHow hard the lot insisted to obey,And wish’d some man would steal her soon away;More than her beads she then would him adore,And be contented with the name ofWHORE.

Yetall this discipline was ill bestow’d,

Her youthful mind still thought of flesh and blood;

And, to conceal it, still she strove in vain;

She often in her cell would loud complain

How hard the lot insisted to obey,

And wish’d some man would steal her soon away;

More than her beads she then would him adore,

And be contented with the name ofWHORE.

TheAbbess heard her as she pass’d by chance,And fancy’d she had got some vile romance;Knock’d at the cell, and found her daughter there,With not a book—unless a book of pray’r;She wonder’d much, and told the virgin so,Who did not hide the truth, but let her know.Amaz’d the matron lifted up her eyes,And shew’d her horror by her vast surprize.

TheAbbess heard her as she pass’d by chance,

And fancy’d she had got some vile romance;

Knock’d at the cell, and found her daughter there,

With not a book—unless a book of pray’r;

She wonder’d much, and told the virgin so,

Who did not hide the truth, but let her know.

Amaz’d the matron lifted up her eyes,

And shew’d her horror by her vast surprize.

‘O! shame to all that’s pious and that’s good,‘What wild-fire’s this which rages in your blood;‘’Tis, sure, dictated by some imp of Hell!‘You must be mad!—Pray tell me, Are you well?‘Your understanding must be gone astray;‘I’ll call the Doctor to you.—Well-a-day!’

‘O! shame to all that’s pious and that’s good,

‘What wild-fire’s this which rages in your blood;

‘’Tis, sure, dictated by some imp of Hell!

‘You must be mad!—Pray tell me, Are you well?

‘Your understanding must be gone astray;

‘I’ll call the Doctor to you.—Well-a-day!’

TheNun persisted that her mind was right,That she was in her perfect senses quite;AndNature, in her wishes, still prevail’d.Love fill’d her thoughts—and that was all that ail’d.

TheNun persisted that her mind was right,

That she was in her perfect senses quite;

AndNature, in her wishes, still prevail’d.

Love fill’d her thoughts—and that was all that ail’d.

Againthe pious Abbess strove, in vain,Her wicked wants and wishes to explain;Bid her take pattern by her sisterPrue,Who was to holy exercises true;Who ne’er at morn. or evening pray’r, was foundTo cast one carnal eye or thought around?But ev’ry sense was calm, each wish was even,And all her joy, and all her hope in Heav’n.

Againthe pious Abbess strove, in vain,

Her wicked wants and wishes to explain;

Bid her take pattern by her sisterPrue,

Who was to holy exercises true;

Who ne’er at morn. or evening pray’r, was found

To cast one carnal eye or thought around?

But ev’ry sense was calm, each wish was even,

And all her joy, and all her hope in Heav’n.

Thetender maiden look’d again and sigh’d,And to her mental mother thus reply’d:—

Thetender maiden look’d again and sigh’d,

And to her mental mother thus reply’d:—

‘Prue, that you mention, as I’ve heard her say,‘Was, in her younger days, entic’d away;‘The strong temptation she could not withstand,‘But yielded up atNature’s high command.‘Long with a youth indalliancepass’d her life,‘Had all the joys of love—tho’ not a wife;‘And when he left her for a real bride,‘She did another for herself provide;‘Another after that, when that was gone,‘And so, for many years, in joy went on;‘’Till tir’d ofsportingin the am’rous way,‘She turn’d aNun, at last, to fast and pray.‘By her example let me then proceed;‘On joy and pleasure let my wishes feed;‘And when that I’ve been cloy’d with love like her,‘Pray’rs, and a Nunnery, I may prefer.’

‘Prue, that you mention, as I’ve heard her say,

‘Was, in her younger days, entic’d away;

‘The strong temptation she could not withstand,

‘But yielded up atNature’s high command.

‘Long with a youth indalliancepass’d her life,

‘Had all the joys of love—tho’ not a wife;

‘And when he left her for a real bride,

‘She did another for herself provide;

‘Another after that, when that was gone,

‘And so, for many years, in joy went on;

‘’Till tir’d ofsportingin the am’rous way,

‘She turn’d aNun, at last, to fast and pray.

‘By her example let me then proceed;

‘On joy and pleasure let my wishes feed;

‘And when that I’ve been cloy’d with love like her,

‘Pray’rs, and a Nunnery, I may prefer.’

Wasnot the Virgin, tell me sisters pure,Within her mind aHARLOT?—Certain sure.

Wasnot the Virgin, tell me sisters pure,

Within her mind aHARLOT?—Certain sure.

Such, in our boarding-schools, we often find,Where, to improve their morals, they’re design’d:Yet Lewdness, there, is found among the train,And Virtue faintly does her rights maintain;The Dancing-Master, and the Frizeur too,Thepleasing sportsofVenusbring to view;Big belliesandelopementswill take place,AndWHORESalike be found in ev’ry place.

Such, in our boarding-schools, we often find,

Where, to improve their morals, they’re design’d:

Yet Lewdness, there, is found among the train,

And Virtue faintly does her rights maintain;

The Dancing-Master, and the Frizeur too,

Thepleasing sportsofVenusbring to view;

Big belliesandelopementswill take place,

AndWHORESalike be found in ev’ry place.

Butwhy, by me can never be devis’d,AWHOREshould be so horridly despis’d;Why, when by all, throughout the world, they’re us’d!Why they should be so cruelly abus’d.

Butwhy, by me can never be devis’d,

AWHOREshould be so horridly despis’d;

Why, when by all, throughout the world, they’re us’d!

Why they should be so cruelly abus’d.

Thepulpit-thumper rails against aWHORE,And damns theProstitute!—What can he more?Justice pursues her to the very cart,Where, for her folly, she is doom’d to smart.Whips,Gaols, Diseases! all theWHOREassail,And yet, I fancy,WHORESwill never fail.

Thepulpit-thumper rails against aWHORE,

And damns theProstitute!—What can he more?

Justice pursues her to the very cart,

Where, for her folly, she is doom’d to smart.

Whips,Gaols, Diseases! all theWHOREassail,

And yet, I fancy,WHORESwill never fail.

Whatis the reasonWHORESare so in vogue?Why, faith, to gain a true one, ask eachRogue.

Whatis the reasonWHORESare so in vogue?

Why, faith, to gain a true one, ask eachRogue.

TheveryPriest, who dares so much decry,And holds his doctrine up so very high,Will, from the pulpit, cast a side-long glance,To damn the tenets which he dares advance;And e’er, perhaps, he goes to evening pray’r,Will take a bottle with some willing fair;Will to her breasts his saint-like hands apply,And gaze upon her with lascivious eye,In pleasure’s pulpit then will mount, and preachA forceful doctrine, which he dares not teach;Then, sanctify’d, will to his flock amain,Hem, stroke his band—and rail atWHORESagain.

TheveryPriest, who dares so much decry,

And holds his doctrine up so very high,

Will, from the pulpit, cast a side-long glance,

To damn the tenets which he dares advance;

And e’er, perhaps, he goes to evening pray’r,

Will take a bottle with some willing fair;

Will to her breasts his saint-like hands apply,

And gaze upon her with lascivious eye,

In pleasure’s pulpit then will mount, and preach

A forceful doctrine, which he dares not teach;

Then, sanctify’d, will to his flock amain,

Hem, stroke his band—and rail atWHORESagain.

The Justicetoo, who puts the laws in force,Must seem a tyrant over us, of course;Produce each hum-drum act, from bad to worse,Made by old fumblers, for theHARLOT’s curse.Bridewell’s the sentence, then, to all who’re poor,But,gold well tipp’d, will save theflashyWHORE;And the good magistrate some clause will findTo soften evidence unto his mind;Perhaps at night, considering the case,Indulge his feelings in a close embrace;Will, at the tavern, circulate his glass,And take, with glee, his bottle and his lass.

The Justicetoo, who puts the laws in force,

Must seem a tyrant over us, of course;

Produce each hum-drum act, from bad to worse,

Made by old fumblers, for theHARLOT’s curse.

Bridewell’s the sentence, then, to all who’re poor,

But,gold well tipp’d, will save theflashyWHORE;

And the good magistrate some clause will find

To soften evidence unto his mind;

Perhaps at night, considering the case,

Indulge his feelings in a close embrace;

Will, at the tavern, circulate his glass,

And take, with glee, his bottle and his lass.

Goto theCommons[1], to theArchesgo,Where, for divorces, people sue, we know.The Judges and the Proctors, so devout,Would, with the culprit, wish to have a bout.Adultery, tho’ call’d a crying sin,Without they’re paid, would not be worth a pin:They’ll sell you licences to get a bride,And, on complaint, divorces have beside.O happy land! where such good laws remain,That you may wed, and be unwed again;That sacred knot, recorded so on high!Those who have money may with ease untie;Yet there’s no sister ever this deplores,Because it adds so to the list ofWHORES.

Goto theCommons[1], to theArchesgo,

Where, for divorces, people sue, we know.

The Judges and the Proctors, so devout,

Would, with the culprit, wish to have a bout.

Adultery, tho’ call’d a crying sin,

Without they’re paid, would not be worth a pin:

They’ll sell you licences to get a bride,

And, on complaint, divorces have beside.

O happy land! where such good laws remain,

That you may wed, and be unwed again;

That sacred knot, recorded so on high!

Those who have money may with ease untie;

Yet there’s no sister ever this deplores,

Because it adds so to the list ofWHORES.

[1]Doctor’s Commons.

Askat that place where Lords and Commons sit,To shew at once their eloquence and wit;Who rule the nation, and its laws provide,Lift high our fame, the legislation guide;From the Right Rev’rend, in the prelate’s place,The noble Count, or more exalted Grace:Or of the members on the lower side,Whose consequence by none can be deny’d;AskF——xandS——dw——h; aye, and many more,If they, at times, have each not had aWHORE?

Askat that place where Lords and Commons sit,

To shew at once their eloquence and wit;

Who rule the nation, and its laws provide,

Lift high our fame, the legislation guide;

From the Right Rev’rend, in the prelate’s place,

The noble Count, or more exalted Grace:

Or of the members on the lower side,

Whose consequence by none can be deny’d;

AskF——xandS——dw——h; aye, and many more,

If they, at times, have each not had aWHORE?

Thequestion’s foolish, ev’ry one must guessThey all are guilty—either more or less!Were they but stigmatiz’d, as women are,Condemn’d a load of infamy to bear,Their Honours, and Right Honourables too,Would fear to bring their faces forth to view.Why then should we be thus condemn’d alone,When they are guilty, equal, ev’ry one;Were there no men, noWHORESthere sure could be,They strive to make us so, in each degree.

Thequestion’s foolish, ev’ry one must guess

They all are guilty—either more or less!

Were they but stigmatiz’d, as women are,

Condemn’d a load of infamy to bear,

Their Honours, and Right Honourables too,

Would fear to bring their faces forth to view.

Why then should we be thus condemn’d alone,

When they are guilty, equal, ev’ry one;

Were there no men, noWHORESthere sure could be,

They strive to make us so, in each degree.

Havewe a face that’s exquisitely fair,They spread their nets, that beauty to ensnare;Is modesty and innocence our guide,To try to ruin it is all their pride;If we are humble, they our hopes will raise,Strive to undo us still, a thousand ways;Gold, flattery, and treach’ry, they employ,The object which delights them to destroy;Then cast aside, neglected or forgot,We’re doom’d to pine, to languish, and to rot:Or if, when such delusive arts are o’er,We go to others—each is then aWHORE!

Havewe a face that’s exquisitely fair,

They spread their nets, that beauty to ensnare;

Is modesty and innocence our guide,

To try to ruin it is all their pride;

If we are humble, they our hopes will raise,

Strive to undo us still, a thousand ways;

Gold, flattery, and treach’ry, they employ,

The object which delights them to destroy;

Then cast aside, neglected or forgot,

We’re doom’d to pine, to languish, and to rot:

Or if, when such delusive arts are o’er,

We go to others—each is then aWHORE!

YeRogues of Fortune, and ye Rogues of Pow’r,Who ruin females in the guardless hour;Who may beSonsofWHORES, for what you know,Attend to what my artless pen can shew.

YeRogues of Fortune, and ye Rogues of Pow’r,

Who ruin females in the guardless hour;

Who may beSonsofWHORES, for what you know,

Attend to what my artless pen can shew.

Notfar from Town, and in a rural place,Where Nature shone with ev’ry pleasing grace;Where rising hills gave rapture to the sight,With flocks, whose fleeces were all snowy white;Beneath, where lawns extended wide around,And silver murm’ring rivulets were found;There in a humble, tho’ not mean, estate,I drew my being, as ordain’d by fate.My parents, tho’ not born to wealth and pride,The markets still with various things supply’d;Industrious both, they happ’ly found the gainsWere equal to their wishes and their pains.I was their only child, and form’d to bless,I always added to their happiness;They saw my person ev’ry one engage,Beheld my sense increasing with my age;Each Sunday to my dress they’d something add,For pleasing me was making of them glad;A diff’rent ribband bound my flowing hair,Wav’d in my hat, and flutter’d in the air;Thus simply pleas’d, and innocent likewise,I caught, at last,Lothario’s wanton eyes.

Notfar from Town, and in a rural place,

Where Nature shone with ev’ry pleasing grace;

Where rising hills gave rapture to the sight,

With flocks, whose fleeces were all snowy white;

Beneath, where lawns extended wide around,

And silver murm’ring rivulets were found;

There in a humble, tho’ not mean, estate,

I drew my being, as ordain’d by fate.

My parents, tho’ not born to wealth and pride,

The markets still with various things supply’d;

Industrious both, they happ’ly found the gains

Were equal to their wishes and their pains.

I was their only child, and form’d to bless,

I always added to their happiness;

They saw my person ev’ry one engage,

Beheld my sense increasing with my age;

Each Sunday to my dress they’d something add,

For pleasing me was making of them glad;

A diff’rent ribband bound my flowing hair,

Wav’d in my hat, and flutter’d in the air;

Thus simply pleas’d, and innocent likewise,

I caught, at last,Lothario’s wanton eyes.

Aboutfifteen, my face had Nature’s bloom,My lips enticing, and my breath perfume!My eyes, like sloes, were glossy, black, and bright!My shape was slender, and my steps were light!

Aboutfifteen, my face had Nature’s bloom,

My lips enticing, and my breath perfume!

My eyes, like sloes, were glossy, black, and bright!

My shape was slender, and my steps were light!

Hesaw me tripping o’er the dewy lawn,Brisk as the lambkins, or the bounding fawn;He hail’d my beauties in so soft a speech,Which sure a heart less kind than mine might reach;I blush’d, he follow’d, met me ev’ry day,’Till I became, at last, his destin’d prey.Yet, oh! what vows, what oaths, did he prepare,Before I fell into his baneful snare;He call’d me wife, swore I should be his bride,With protestations, very high beside;Beg’d to my parents I would nothing tell,If that I wish’d his love and person well.

Hesaw me tripping o’er the dewy lawn,

Brisk as the lambkins, or the bounding fawn;

He hail’d my beauties in so soft a speech,

Which sure a heart less kind than mine might reach;

I blush’d, he follow’d, met me ev’ry day,

’Till I became, at last, his destin’d prey.

Yet, oh! what vows, what oaths, did he prepare,

Before I fell into his baneful snare;

He call’d me wife, swore I should be his bride,

With protestations, very high beside;

Beg’d to my parents I would nothing tell,

If that I wish’d his love and person well.

Hisfriends were pow’rful, and I soon comply’d,For what he ask’d, then could not be deny’d;I thought that time would reconcile my fate,And lift me far above my present state;Such fatal folly I must still deplore,No wife am I, but aNEGLECTEDWHORE!

Hisfriends were pow’rful, and I soon comply’d,

For what he ask’d, then could not be deny’d;

I thought that time would reconcile my fate,

And lift me far above my present state;

Such fatal folly I must still deplore,

No wife am I, but aNEGLECTEDWHORE!

Fruitionsoon my lover’s passion cool’d,His absence let me know how I was fool’d;My heaving womb a diff’rent weight confest,My parents saw it, and were much distrest:I told the cause;—they turn’d me out of door,And made we wander forth a wretchedWHORE!

Fruitionsoon my lover’s passion cool’d,

His absence let me know how I was fool’d;

My heaving womb a diff’rent weight confest,

My parents saw it, and were much distrest:

I told the cause;—they turn’d me out of door,

And made we wander forth a wretchedWHORE!

Tofaithless him my ruin I must lay,He first seduc’d and did my heart betray:—High in a diff’rent sphere he took a wife;O! may she be to him eternal strife;May she to lustful passion give her heart!That ev’ry fool, with him, may have a part;Tho’ higher born, no diff’rence I can seeShe should not be aWHORE—as well as me.ThatWHORESare many, certainly you’ll find,Is owing to the baseness of mankind;Tho’ inclination oft’ our passions sway,’Tis man, vile man! first teaches us the way.

Tofaithless him my ruin I must lay,

He first seduc’d and did my heart betray:—

High in a diff’rent sphere he took a wife;

O! may she be to him eternal strife;

May she to lustful passion give her heart!

That ev’ry fool, with him, may have a part;

Tho’ higher born, no diff’rence I can see

She should not be aWHORE—as well as me.

ThatWHORESare many, certainly you’ll find,

Is owing to the baseness of mankind;

Tho’ inclination oft’ our passions sway,

’Tis man, vile man! first teaches us the way.

Byhim we first are taught each vicious art,Each crime which can corrupt and spoil the heart.Is any female fond of dress, or play,(And where is one that is not?—you will say)Her fav’rite passion he will strive to please,And work into her folly by degrees;Like vermin in a building, undermine,’Till the whole pile falls down—his whole design;Then leaves the ruin he himself has made,Without one spark of gratitude display’d.

Byhim we first are taught each vicious art,

Each crime which can corrupt and spoil the heart.

Is any female fond of dress, or play,

(And where is one that is not?—you will say)

Her fav’rite passion he will strive to please,

And work into her folly by degrees;

Like vermin in a building, undermine,

’Till the whole pile falls down—his whole design;

Then leaves the ruin he himself has made,

Without one spark of gratitude display’d.

Nopitying eye beholds the hapless fair,She’s left to Death, Diseases, and Despair!Nature cries out, and hunger must be fed,She now must turn a prostitute for bread;Her name is blasted, friendless left, and poor,Tell me what can she do?—why be aWHORE.Lew’d scenes, and lew’d discourse, comes next in play;Deeds dark as night, asham’d to meet the day!Thus they proceed along, from bad to worse,Launch the broad oath! repeat the dreadful curse!’Till, on a laystall, she resigns her breath,By all unpityed, to the arms of death!

Nopitying eye beholds the hapless fair,

She’s left to Death, Diseases, and Despair!

Nature cries out, and hunger must be fed,

She now must turn a prostitute for bread;

Her name is blasted, friendless left, and poor,

Tell me what can she do?—why be aWHORE.

Lew’d scenes, and lew’d discourse, comes next in play;

Deeds dark as night, asham’d to meet the day!

Thus they proceed along, from bad to worse,

Launch the broad oath! repeat the dreadful curse!

’Till, on a laystall, she resigns her breath,

By all unpityed, to the arms of death!

Yetev’ry one of feeling must deplore,That man, vile man, first made the wretch aWHORE!

Yetev’ry one of feeling must deplore,

That man, vile man, first made the wretch aWHORE!

FINIS.


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