PLAGUE to thy husband, scandal to thy sex, Whose wearying tongue does every ear perplex; False to thy own false soul, thou dost declare How lust and pride do reign and revel there, Tell the world too how nicely chaste you are. This dull, compulsive virtue's owned: for who, With one so odious, would have aught to do? But this misfortune you too oft condole, Whilst loosest thoughts debauch your willing soul. Thy best discourse is but mere ribaldry, Telling how fond all that e'er see thee be, And, loving all thyself, think'st all in love with thee. With pious heart thou studiest vanity, And talk'st obscene by rules of modesty. Thus sins nick-named speak the infernal saint, Whose shining robes are tawdry clothes and paint: Extravagance and cheats you mark for wit, Thou abstract of contention, fraud and spite. If Socrates could have made choice of thee, Thou wouldst have baffled his philosophy, And turned his patience to a lunacy. The restless waters of the raging sea Are a serene and halcyon stream to thee: They keep their banks and sometimes can be still, Thou art all tempest, know'st no bounds in ill. Pride, lust, contention reign and yet repine: Vesuvius' noise and flame has less of hell than thine. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A DREAM, FR. SONGS OF INNOCENCE by WILLIAM BLAKE COWPER'S GRAVE by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE MEANING OF THE LOOK by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING A SEA STORY by EMILY HENRIETTA HICKEY DIVINA COMMEDIA (INTRODUCTORY POEMS): 1 by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE VISION OF SIR LAUNFAL by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL BALLAD OF THE GOODLY FERE by EZRA POUND |