T. R. Smith, comp. Poetica Erotica: Rare and Curious Amatory Verse. 1921–22.
The Happy Night
By John Sheffield, Duke of Buckinghamshire (16481721)SINCE now my Silvia is as kind as fair, | |
Let wit and joy succeed my dull despair. | |
O what a night of pleasure was the last! | |
A full reward for all my troubles past; | |
And on my head if future mischiefs fall, | 5 |
This happy night shall make amends for all. | |
Nay, tho’ my Silvia’s love should turn to hate, | |
I’ll think of this, and die contented with my fate. | |
Twelve was the lucky minute when we met, | |
And on her bed we close together set; | 10 |
Tho’ listening spies might be perhaps too near, | |
Love filled our hearts; there was no room for fear, | |
Now, whilst I strive her melting heart to move; | |
With all the powerful eloquence of love; | |
In her fair face I saw the color rise, | 15 |
And an unusual softness in her eyes; | |
Gently they look, I with joy adore, | |
That only charm they never had before. | |
The wounds they made, her tongue was used to heal, | |
But now these gentle enemies reveal | 20 |
A secret, which that friend would still conceal. | |
My eyes transported too with amorous rage, | |
Seem fierce with expectation to engage; | |
But fast she holds my hands, and close her thighs, | |
And what she longs to do, with frowns denies. | 25 |
A strange effect on foolish women wrought, | |
Bred in disguises, and by custom taught: | |
Custom, that prudence sometimes overrules, | |
But serves instead of reason to the Fools! | |
Custom, which all the world to slavery brings, | 30 |
The dull excuse for doing silly things. | |
She, by this method of her foolish sex, | |
Is forced awhile me and herself to vex: | |
But now, when thus we had been struggling long, | |
Her limbs grow weak, and her desires grow strong; | 35 |
How can she hold to let the hero in? | |
He storms without, and love betrays within. | |
Her hands at last, to hide her blushes, leave | |
The Fort unguarded, willing to receive | |
My fierce assault made with a lover’s haste, | 40 |
Like lightning piercing and as quickly past. | |
Thus does fond nature with her children play; | |
Just shows us joy, then snatches it away. | |
’Tis not the excess of pleasure makes it short, | |
The pain of love’s as raging as the sport; | 45 |
And yet, alas! that lasts: we sigh all night | |
With grief; but scarce one moment with delight. | |
Some little pain may check her kind desire, | |
But not enough to make her once retire. | |
Maids wounds for pleasure bear, as men for praise; | 50 |
Here honor heals, there love the smart allays. | |
The world, if just, would harmful courage blame, | |
And this more innocent reward with fame. | |
Now she her well-contented thoughts employs | |
On her past fears, and on her future joys: | 55 |
Whose harbinger did roughly all remove, | |
To make fit room for great, luxurious love. | |
Fond of the welcome guest, her arms embrace | |
My body, and her hands another place: | |
Which with one touch so pleased and proud doth grow, | 60 |
It swells beyond the grasp that made it so: | |
Confinement scorns, in any straiter walls | |
Than those of love, where it contented falls. | |
Tho’ twice o’erthrown, he more enflamed does rise, | |
And will, to the last drop, fight out the prize. | 65 |
She like some Amazon in story proves, | |
That overcomes the hero whom she loves. | |
In the close strife she takes so much delight, | |
She then can think of nothing but the fight: | |
With joy she lays him panting at her feet, | 70 |
But with more joy does his recovery meet. | |
Her trembling hands first gently raise his head: | |
She almost dies for fear that he is dead: | |
Then binds his wounds up with her busy hand, | |
And with that balm enables him to stand, | 75 |
’Til by her eyes she conquers him once more, | |
And wounds him deeper than she did before. | |
Tho’ fallen from the top of Pleasure’s Hill, | |
With longing eyes we look up thither still; | |
Still thither our unwearyed wishes tend, | 80 |
’Til we that height of happiness ascend | |
By gentle steps: the ascent itself exceeds | |
All joys, but that alone to which it leads: | |
First then, so long and lovingly we kiss, | |
As if, like doves, we knew no dearer bliss. | 85 |
Still in one mouth our tongues together play, | |
While groping hands are pleased no less than they. | |
Thus clinged together, now a while we rest, | |
Breathing our souls into each other’s breast; | |
Then give a general kiss of all our parts, | 90 |
While this way we make exchange of hearts. | |
Here, would my praise, as well as pleasure, dwell: | |
Enjoyment’s self I scarcely like so well: | |
The little Kiss comes short of rage and strength, | |
So largely recompensed with endless length. | 95 |
This is a joy would last, if we could stay: | |
But love’s too eager to admit delay, | |
And hurries us along so smooth a way. | |
Now, wanton with delight, we nimbly move | |
Our pliant limbs, in all the shapes of love; | 100 |
Our motion not like those of gamesome fools, | |
Whose active bodies show their heavy souls: | |
But sports of love, in which a willing mind | |
Make us as able as our hearts are kind: | |
At length, all languishing, and out of breath, | 105 |
Panting, as in the agonies of death, | |
We lie entranced, ’til one provoking kiss | |
Transports our ravished souls to Paradise. | |
O Heaven of Love! thou moment of delight! | |
Wronged by my words, my fancy does thee right. | 110 |
Methinks I lie all melting in her charms, | |
And fast locked up within her legs and arms; | |
Bent on our minds, and all our thoughts on fire, | |
Just laboring in the pangs of fierce desire. | |
At once, like misers, wallowing in their store, | 115 |
In full possession; yet desiring more. | |
Thus with repeated pleasures, while we waste | |
Our happy hours that like short minutes past, | |
To such a sum of bliss our joys amount, | |
The number now becomes too great to count. | 120 |
Silent, as night, are all sincerest joys, | |
Like deepest waters running with least noise. | |
But now, at last, for want of further force, | |
From deeds alas; we fall into discourse; | |
A Fall, which each of us in rain bemoans; | 125 |
A greater Fall than that of kings from thrones. | |
The tide of pleasure flowing now no more, | |
We lie like fish left gasping on the shore; | |
And now, as after fighting, wounds appear, | |
Which we in heat did neither feel, nor fear: | 130 |
She, for her sake, entreats me to give o’er, | |
And yet for mine would gladly suffer more. | |
Her words are coy, while all her motions woo, | |
And, when she asks me, if it please me too, | |
I rage to show how well, but ’twill not do. | 135 |
Thus would hot love run itself out of breath, | |
And wanting rest, find it too soon in death; | |
Did not wise nature with a gentle force, | |
Restrain its rage, and stop its headlong course: | |
Indulgently severe, she well does spare | 140 |
This child of hers, that most deserves her care. | |