A BEAUTIFUL YOUNG NYMPH GOING TO BED.

By Jonathan Swift

Corinna, pride of Drury-Lane,

For whom no shepherd sighs in vain;

Never did Covent-Garden boast

So bright a batter'd strolling toast!

No drunken rake to pick her up,

No cellar where on tick to sup;

Returning at the midnight hour,

Four stories climbing to her bower;

Then, seated on a three-legg'd chair,

Takes off her artificial hair;

Now picking out a crystal eye,

She wipes it clean, and lays it by.

Her eyebrows from a mouse's hide

Stuck on with art on either side,

Pulls off with care, and first displays‘ em,

Then in a play-book smoothly lays‘ em.

Now dext'rously her plumpers draws,

That serve to fill her hollow jaws,

Untwists a wire, and from her gums

A set of teeth completely comes;

Pulls out the rags contrived to prop

Her flabby dugs, and down they drop.

Proceeding on, the lovely goddess

Unlaces next her steel-ribb'd bodice,

Which, by the operator's skill,

Press down the lumps, the hollows fill.

Up goes her hand, and off she slips

The bolsters that supply her hips;

With gentlest touch she next explores

Her chancres, issues, running sores;

Effects of many a sad disaster,

And then to each applies a plaster:

But must, before she goes to bed,

Rub off the daubs of white and red,

And smooth the furrows in her front

With greasy paper stuck upo n't.

She takes a bolus ere she sleeps;

And then between two blankets creeps.

With pains of love tormented lies;

Or, if she chance to close her eyes,

Of Bridewelland the Compterdreams,

And feels the lash, and faintly screams;

Or, by a faithless bully drawn,

At some hedge-tavern lies in pawn;

Or to Jamaicaseems transported

Alone, and by no planter courted;

Or, near Fleet-ditch'soozy brinks,

Surrounded with a hundred stinks,

Belated, seems on watch to lie,

And snap some cully passing by;

Or, struck with fear, her fancy runs

On watchmen, constables, and duns,

From whom she meets with frequent rubs;

But never from religious clubs;

Whose favour she is sure to find,

Because she pays them all in kind.

Corinna wakes. A dreadful sight!

Behold the ruins of the night!

A wicked rat her plaster stole,

Half eat, and dragg'd it to his hole.

The crystal eye, alas! was miss'd;

And puss had on her plumpers p — st,

A pigeon pick'd her issue-pease:

And Shock her tresses fill'd with fleas.

The nymph, though in this mangled plight

Must ev'ry morn her limbs unite.

But how shall I describe her arts

To re-collect the scatter'd parts?

Or show the anguish, toil, and pain,

Of gath'ring up herself again?

The bashful Muse will never bear

In such a scene to interfere.

Corinna, in the morning dizen'd,

Who sees, will spew; who smells, be poison'd.