Song
Matthew Prior
How old may Phyllis be, you ask, Whose beauty thus all hearts engages? To answer is no easy task; For she has really two ages. Stiff in brocard, and pinch'd in stays, Her patches, paint, and jewels on; All day let envy view her face; And Phyllis is but twenty-one. Paint, patches, jeweTHE merchant, to secure his treasure, Conveys it in a borrow'd name: Euphelia serves to grace my measure; But Chloe is my real flame. My softest verse, my darling lyre, Upon Euphelia's toilet lay; When Chloe noted her desire That I should sing, that I should play. My lyre I tune, my voice I raise; But with my numbers mix my sighs: And while I sing Euphelia's praise, I fix my soul on Chloe's eyes. Fair Chloe blush'd: Euphelia frown'd: I sung, and gazed: I play'd, and trembled: And Venus to the Loves around Remark'd, how ill we all dissembled.
Next 10 Poems
- Matthew Prior : The Lady Who Offers Her Looking-glass To Venus
- Matthew Prior : The Merchant, To Secure His Treasure
- Matthew Prior : The Question To Lisetta
- Matthew Prior : To A Child Of Quality Of Five Years Old
- Matthew Prior : To A Child Of Quality, Five Years Old, 1704. The Author Then Forty
- Matthew Prior : To A Lady
- Matthew Prior : To A Lady, She Refusing To Continue A Dispute With Me, And Leaving Me In The Argument: An Ode
- Matthew Prior : To Chloe Jealous
- Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin : An Elegy
- Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin : An Invocation
Previous 10 Poems
- Matthew Prior : Phyllis's Age
- Matthew Prior : On My Birthday, July 21
- Matthew Prior : Jinny The Just
- Matthew Prior : Horace, Lib. I, Epist. Ix, Imitated
- Matthew Prior : For My Own Monument
- Matthew Prior : Cupid Mistaken
- Matthew Prior : An Ode
- Matthew Prior : An Epitaph
- Matthew Prior : A True Maid
- Matthew Prior : A Simile