Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Beautiful Young Nymph Going To Bed. by Jonathan Swift
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A Beautiful Young Nymph Going To Bed.

    By Jonathan Swift



    WRITTEN FOR THE HONOUR OF THE FAIR SEX. 1731


    Corinna, pride of Drury-Lane,
    For whom no shepherd sighs in vain;
    Never did Covent-Garden boast
    So bright a batter'd strolling toast!
    No drunken rake to pick her up,
    No cellar where on tick to sup;
    Returning at the midnight hour,
    Four stories climbing to her bower;
    Then, seated on a three-legg'd chair,
    Takes off her artificial hair;
    Now picking out a crystal eye,
    She wipes it clean, and lays it by.
    Her eyebrows from a mouse's hide
    Stuck on with art on either side,
    Pulls off with care, and first displays 'em,
    Then in a play-book smoothly lays 'em.
    Now dext'rously her plumpers draws,
    That serve to fill her hollow jaws,
    Untwists a wire, and from her gums
    A set of teeth completely comes;
    Pulls out the rags contrived to prop
    Her flabby dugs, and down they drop.
    Proceeding on, the lovely goddess
    Unlaces next her steel-ribb'd bodice,
    Which, by the operator's skill,
    Press down the lumps, the hollows fill.
    Up goes her hand, and off she slips
    The bolsters that supply her hips;
    With gentlest touch she next explores
    Her chancres, issues, running sores;
    Effects of many a sad disaster,
    And then to each applies a plaster:
    But must, before she goes to bed,
    Rub off the daubs of white and red,
    And smooth the furrows in her front
    With greasy paper stuck upon't.
    She takes a bolus ere she sleeps;
    And then between two blankets creeps.
    With pains of love tormented lies;
    Or, if she chance to close her eyes,
    Of Bridewell[1] and the Compter[1] dreams,
    And feels the lash, and faintly screams;
    Or, by a faithless bully drawn,
    At some hedge-tavern lies in pawn;
    Or to Jamaica[2] seems transported
    Alone, and by no planter courted;
    Or, near Fleet-ditch's[3] oozy brinks,
    Surrounded with a hundred stinks,
    Belated, seems on watch to lie,
    And snap some cully passing by;
    Or, struck with fear, her fancy runs
    On watchmen, constables, and duns,
    From whom she meets with frequent rubs;
    But never from religious clubs;
    Whose favour she is sure to find,
    Because she pays them all in kind.
        Corinna wakes. A dreadful sight!
    Behold the ruins of the night!
    A wicked rat her plaster stole,
    Half eat, and dragg'd it to his hole.
    The crystal eye, alas! was miss'd;
    And puss had on her plumpers p - st,
    A pigeon pick'd her issue-pease:
    And Shock her tresses fill'd with fleas.
        The nymph, though in this mangled plight
    Must ev'ry morn her limbs unite.
    But how shall I describe her arts
    To re-collect the scatter'd parts?
    Or show the anguish, toil, and pain,
    Of gath'ring up herself again?
    The bashful Muse will never bear
    In such a scene to interfere.
    Corinna, in the morning dizen'd,
    Who sees, will spew; who smells, be poison'd.



Extra Info:
[Footnote 1: See Cunningham's "Handbook of London." Bridewell was the Prison to which harlots were sent, and were made to beat hemp and pick oakum and were whipped if they did not perform their tasks. See the Plate in Hogarth's "Harlot's Progress." The Prison has, happily, been cleared away. The hall, court room, etc., remain at 14, New Bridge Street. The Compter, a similar Prison, was also abolished. For details of these abominations, see "London Past and Present," by Wheatley.]

[Footnote 2: Jamaica seems to have been regarded as a place of exile. See "A quiet life and a good name," ante, p. 152. - W. E. B.]

[Footnote 3: See ante, p. 78, "Descripton of a City Shower." - W. E. B.]



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