While Beast instructs his fair, and innocent wife, In the past pleasures of his sensual life, Telling the motions of each petticoat, And how his Ganymede moved, and how his goat, And now, her (hourly) her own cucqueen makes, In varied shapes, which for his lust she takes: What doth he else, but say, leave to be chaste, Just wife, and, to change me, make woman's haste. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONG OF NATURE by RALPH WALDO EMERSON THE CONVERGENCE OF THE TWAIN; LINES ON LOSS OF THE TITANIC by THOMAS HARDY LOST AND FOUND by GEORGE MACDONALD JOY OF THE MORNING by EDWIN MARKHAM SONG OF THE PILGRIMS [SEPTEMBER 16, 1620] by THOMAS COGSWELL UPHAM DRINKING SONG (1) by ALCAEUS OF MYTILENE THE APOLOGY OF THE BISHOPS IN ANSWER TO BONNER'S GHOST by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |