Sportive vvit the muses merriment, a new spring of lusty drollery, joviall fancies, and a la mode lamponnes, on some heroic persons of these late times, never before exposed to the publick view / collected for the publick good by a club of sparkling wits, viz. C.J., B.J., L.M., W.T., cum multis alsis----
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Title
Sportive vvit the muses merriment, a new spring of lusty drollery, joviall fancies, and a la mode lamponnes, on some heroic persons of these late times, never before exposed to the publick view / collected for the publick good by a club of sparkling wits, viz. C.J., B.J., L.M., W.T., cum multis alsis----
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London :: Printed for Nath. Brook ...,
1656.
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"Sportive vvit the muses merriment, a new spring of lusty drollery, joviall fancies, and a la mode lamponnes, on some heroic persons of these late times, never before exposed to the publick view / collected for the publick good by a club of sparkling wits, viz. C.J., B.J., L.M., W.T., cum multis alsis----." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A54795.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 13, 2024.
Pages
descriptionPage [unnumbered]
A SONG.
1.
Come, Sweet, and draw the Curtain round,That we may meet where pleasures do abound;Come, throw thine arms about me,And I will embrace thee,O thou Myrrour of delight.
2.
Oh it bubbles in my veins,Casteth forth such a frothWorth thy beauties and thy pains;Where none shall see but mee,None shall feel but thee:Leave off whining,Let's be sw —Sweet, agree, agree.
descriptionPage [unnumbered]
3.
See how th' inviting Balm bedewsHer belly white, that like to iv'ry shews,Oh, I cannot hold;I must and will be bold:Kiss then, and put out the light,
4.
Oh it comes, it comes amainUp this lane to my brain,And distilleth down again:Fix it there, and let it beAlmost a Tympany.Leave thy whining;Night 's declining:Sweet, agree, agree.
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