Poems by J.C. ; with additions.

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Title
Poems by J.C. ; with additions.
Author
Cleveland, John, 1613-1658.
Publication
[S.l. :: s.n.],
1651.
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"Poems by J.C. ; with additions." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A33439.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 18, 2024.

Pages

The Antiplatonick.

FOR shame, thou everlasting Woer, Still saying Grace, and never falling to her! Love that's in Contemplation plac't, Is Venus drawn but to the Wast. Unlesse your Flame confesse its Gender, And your Parley cause surrender; Y'are Salamanders of a cold desire, That live untouch't amid the hottest fire.
What though she be a Dame of stone, The Widow of Pigmalion; As hard and un-relenting She, As the new-crusted Niobe; Or what doth more of Statue carry A Nunne of the Platonick Quarrey? Love melts the rigor which the rocks have bred, A Flint will break upon a Feather-bed.
For shame you pretty Female Elves, Cease for to Candy up your selves: No more, you Sectaries of the Game, No more of your calcining flame.

Page 16

Women Commence by Cupids Dart; As a Kings Hunting dubs a Hart. Loves Votaries inthrall each others soul, Till both of them live but upon Paroll.
Vertue's no more in Women-kind But the green-sicknesse of the mind. Philosophy, their new delight, A kind of Charcoal Appetite. There's no Sophistry prevails, Where all-convincing Love assails: But the disputing Petticoat will Warp, As skilfull Gamesters are to seek at Sharp.
The souldier, that man of Iron, Whom Ribs of Horror all inviron; That's strung with Wire, in stead of Veins, In whose imbraces you're in chains, Let a Magnetick Girle appear, Straight he turns Cupids Cuiraseer. Love storms his lips, and takes the Fortresse in, For all the Brisled Turn-pikes of his chin.
Since Loves Artillery then checks The Breast-works of the firmest Sex, Come let's in Affections Riot, Th'are sickly pleasures keep a Diet. Give me a Lover bold and free, Not Eunuch't with Formality; Like an Embassador that beds a Queen, With the Nice Caution of a sword between.
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