(My husband, thank my stars, was out of town ;) I vow'd I scarce could sleep since first I knew him, Thus day by day, and month by month we pass'd, It pleased the Lord to take my spouse at last. I tore my gown, I soil'd my locks with dust, And beat my breast as wretched widows-must. Before my face my handkerchief I spread, To hide the flood of tears I did not shed. The good man's coffin to the church was borne: Around, the neighbours, and my clerk too, mourn. But as he march'd, good gods! he show'd a pair Of legs and feet, so clean, so strong, so fair! Of twenty winters' age he seem'd to be, But to my tale: A month scarce pass'd away, And knew full well to raise my voice on high; My spouse (who was, you know, to learning bred) A certain treatise oft at evening read, Where divers authors (whom the devil confound For all their lies!) were in one volume bound. Valerius, whole; and of St. Jerome, part; Chrysippus and Tertullian, Ovid's Art, Solomon's Proverbs, Eloïsa's loves; And many more than sure the church approves. More legions were there here of wicked wives, Than good in all the Bible and saints' lives. Who drew the lion vanquish'd? 'twas a man. But could we women write as scholars can, Men should stand mark'd with far more wickedness Than all the sons of Adam could redress. Love seldom haunts the breast where learning lies, And Venus sets ere Mercury can rise. Those play the scholars, who can't play the men, And use that weapon which they have, their pen; When old, and past the relish of delight, Then down they sit, and in their dotage write, That not one woman keeps her marriage vow. (This by the way; but to my purpose now.) It chanced my husband on a winter's night, Read in this book, aloud, with strange delight, How the first female (as the Scriptures show) Brought her own spouse and all his race to woe. How Samson fell; and he whom Dejanire Wrapp'd in the envenom'd shirt, and set on fire. How cursed Eriphyle her lord betray'd, And the dire ambush Clytemnestra laid. But what most pleased him was the Cretan Dame, And Husband bull-oh monstrous! fie, for shame! He had by heart the whole detail of woe Xantippe made her good man undergo; : He read, how Arius to his friend complain'd, A fatal tree was growing in his land, On which three wives successively had twined A sliding noose, and waver'd in the wind. 'Where grows this plant,' replied the friend, 'oh where? For better fruit did never orchard bear: Give me some slip of this most blissful tree, And in my garden planted shall it be.' Then how two wives their lords' destruction prove, Through hatred one, and one through too much love; That for her husband mix'd a poisonous draught, And this for lust an amorous philtre bought: The nimble juice soon seized his giddy head, Frantic at night, and in the morning dead. How some with swords their sleeping lords have slain, And some have hammer'd nails into their brain, And some have drench'd them with a deadly potion; All this he read, and read with great devotion. Long time I heard, and swell'd, and blush'd, and frown'd: But when no end to these vile tales I found, But after many a hearty struggle pass'd, I took to heart the merits of the cause, Now, Heaven, on all my husbands gone, bestow THE FIRST BOOK OF STATIUS HIS THEBAIS. ARGUMENT. Edipus, king of Thebes, having by mistake slain his father Laius, and married his mother Jocasta, put out his own eyes, and resigned the realm to his sons, Eteocles and Polynices. Being neglected by them, he makes his prayer to the fury Tisiphone, to sow debate betwixt the brothers. They agree at last to reign singly, each a year by turns, and the first lot is obtained by. Eteocles. Jupiter, in a council of the gods, declares his resolution of punishing the Thebans, and Argives also, by means of a marriage between Polynices and one of the daughters of Adrastus, king of Argos. Juno opposes, but to no effect; and Mercury is sent on a message to the Shades, to the ghost of Laius, who is to appear to Eteocles, and provoke him to break the agreement. Polynices in the mean time departs from Thebes by night, is overtaken by a storm, and arrives at Argos; where he meets with Tydeus, who had fled from Calydon, having killed his brother. Adrastus entertains them, having received an oracle from Apollo that his daughter should be married to a boar and a |