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Lady Mary Wortley Montagu

was the eldest daughter of Evelyn, Duke of Kingston, and was born about 1690 at Thoresby in Nottinghamshire. In 1712 she married Edward Wortley Montagu, some time ambassador at Constantinople. Whilst in the East, she wrote many of her celebrated letters describing the manners and customs of the people with whom she was brought into contact. A life marked by variety of incident was closed in 1762.

Dear Colin, Prevent

DEAR Colin, prevent my warm blushes,
Since how can I speak without pain?
My eyes have oft told you my wishes,
O! can't you their meaning explain?

My passion would lose by expression,
And you too might cruelly blame;
Then don't you expect a confession,
Of what is too tender to name.

Since yours is the province of speaking,
Why should you expect it from me?
Our wishes should be in our keeping,
'Till you tell us what they should be.

Then quickly why don't you discover?

Did your heart feel such tortures as mine,

I need not tell over and over

What I in my bosom confine.

Colin's Answer

GOOD Madam, when ladies are willing,
A man must needs look like a fool;
For me, I would not give a shilling
For one that can love without rule.

At least you should wait for our offers,
Nor snatch like old maids in despair;
If you've lived to those years without proffers,
Your sighs are now lost in the air.

You should leave us to guess at your blushing And not speak the matter too plain; 'Tis ours to be forward and pushing; 'Tis yours to affect a disdain.

That you're in a terrible taking

From all your fond oglings I see !

But the fruit that will fall without shaking
Indeed is too mellow for me.

Richard Savage

was born in London in 1697, and died a debtor in jail at Bristol in 1743. He devoted too much energy to an effort to be regarded as a son or Earl Rivers. Discarded by his mother, his father dead, poverty dogged his footsteps. He found a generous friend in Sir Richard Steele, and a companion in Johnson, who, too, tasted much of the bitter cup of neglect. In 1744, Johnson wrote his Life of Savage, which of all his Lives of the Poets is perhaps the best, in the sense of being the most intensely sympathetic. A life such as that of Savage, full of the strangest vicissitudes, has furnished material to the novelist and the dramatist. Charles Whitehead, an early contemporary of Dickens, wrote a story. Whitehead himself was something of a neglected genius, but he too has found a Johnson in Mr. Mackenzie Bell (Charles Whitehead: A Forgotten Genius, 1885), who speaks of Richard Savage: A Romance o Real Life, as having the merit of vivifying in a marvellously realistic manner the historical character of the story. Still more recently a play entitled 'Richard Savage,' by Mr. J. M. Barrie and Mr. H. M. B. Watson, was produced in London.

Verses to a Young Lady

POLLY, from me, though now a love-sick youth,
Nay, though a poet, hear the voice of truth!
Polly, you're not a beauty, yet you're pretty;
So grave, yet gay, so silly, yet so witty;
A heart of softness, yet a tongue of satire ;
You've cruelty, yet, ev'n with that, good nature:
Now you are free, and now reserv'd awhile;
Now a forc'd frown betrays a willing smile.

Reproach'd for absence, yet your sight deny'd ;
My tongue you silence, yet my silence chide.

How would you praise me, should your sex defame!
Yet, should they praise, grow jealous, and exclaim.
If I despair, with some kind look you bless;
But if I hope, at once all hope suppress.

You scorn; yet should my passion change, or fail,
Too late you'd whimper out a softer tale.
You love; yet from your lover's wish retire;
Doubt, yet discern; deny, and yet desire.

Such, Polly, are your sex-part truth, part fiction,
Some thought, much whim, and all a contradiction.

Robert Dodsley

who was born at Mansfield in Nottinghamshire in 1703 was a footman in the service of the Hon. Mrs. Lowther when his first book, The Muse in Livery, was published. He next wrote a dramatic piece entitled 'The Toy Shop,' and, Pope standing as his friend, its production at Covent Garden followed with great success in 1735. In this same year he entered upon a business career, opening a bookseller's shop in Pall Mall, and numbered Chesterfield, Lyttelton, Shenstone, and Johnson among his active friends. He was the author of a moral treatise, The Economy of Human Life, which was attributed to Chesterfield. He rendered an important service to dramatic literature by the publication of a collection of old English plays. The Annual Register, a work upon which Burke was engaged during many successive years, was started by him in 1758. He died in 1764. He was the author of such verses as these :Come, my fairest! learn of me,

Learn to give and take the bliss!
Come! my love, here's none but we
I'll instruct thee how to kiss.

Throw thy lovely twining arms

Round my neck, or round my waist;
And, whilst I devour thy charms,
Let me closely be embraced.

To my breast with rapture cling!
Look with transport on my face!

Kiss me, press me! everything

To endear the fond embrace.

Yet why did a master so accomplished in the art of love
remain a bachelor?

The Parting Kiss

ONE kind kiss before we part,
Drop a tear, and bid adieu :
Though we sever, my fond heart
Till we meet shall pant for you.

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