Caricamento in corso...

To a Young Lady, With Some Lampreys

With lovers, '€™twas of old the fashion
By presents to convey their passion;
No matter what the gift they sent,
The Lady saw that love was meant.
Fair Atalanta, as a favour,
Took the boar’€™s head her Hero gave her;
Nor could the bristly thing affront her,
‘€™Twas a fit present from a hunter.
When Squires send woodcocks to the dame,
It serves to show their absent flame:
Some by a snip of woven hair,
In posied lockets bribe the fair;
How many mercenary matches
Have sprung from Di’€™mond-rings and watches!
But hold '€“ a ring, a watch, a locket,
Would drain at once a Poet’€™s pocket;
He should send songs that cost him nought,
Nor ev’€™n he prodigal of thought.
   Why then send Lampreys? fye, for shame!
‘€™Twill set a virgin’€™s blood on flame.
This to fifteen a proper gift!
It might lend sixty five a lift.
   I know your maiden Aunt will scold,
And think my present somewhat bold.
I see her lift her hands and eyes.
   '€˜What eat it, Niece? eat Spanish flies!
‘€˜Lamprey’€™s a most immodest diet:
‘€˜You’€™ll neither wake nor sleep in quiet.
‘€˜Should I to night eat Sago cream,
‘€˜'€™Twould make me blush to tell my dream;
‘€˜If I eat Lobster, '€™tis so warming,
‘€˜That ev’€™ry man I see looks charming;
‘€˜Wherefore had not the filthy fellow
‘€˜Laid Rochester upon your pillow?
‘€˜I vow and swear, I think the present
‘€˜Had been as modest and as decent.
   '€˜Who has her virtue in her power?
‘€˜Each day has its unguarded hour;
‘€˜Always in danger of undoing,
‘€˜A prawn, a shrimp may prove our ruin!
   '€˜The shepherdess, who lives on salad,
‘€˜To cool her youth, controuls her palate;
‘€˜Should Dian’€™s maids turn liqu’€™rish livers,
‘€˜And of huge lampreys rob the rivers,
‘€˜Then all beside each glade and Visto,
‘€˜You’€™d see Nymphs lying like Calisto.
   '€˜The man who meant to heat your blood,
‘€˜Needs not himself such vicious food '€“'€™
   In this, I own, your Aunt is clear,
I sent you what I well might spare:
For when I see you, (without joking)
Your eyes, lips, breasts, are so provoking,
They set my heart more cock-a-hoop,
Than could whole seas of craw-fish soupe.
Altre opere di John Gay...



Top