[Page 76]

Against Free-Will.

A SONG.

I.
1 GO silly Mortal, and ask thy Creator,
2 Why thy short Life is tormented with care,
3 Why thou art slave to the follies of Nature,
4 Why for thy Plague he made Women so fair?
5 If Cloes Glances
6 Can charm thy Senses,
7 And Beauty force thee into her snare;
8 What's this Free Will of which Gownmen so prate,
9 When none, none, have power to controul their Fate.
II.
10 If Man be Monarch of all the Creation,
11 Women in Reason should stoop to his sway;
12 Fair, Rich, or Witty, by free Inclination
13 Owning his Priviledge, calmly obey:
[Page 77]
14 Else every Brute is
15 More blest with Beauties.
16 The Horse or Stag each can seize his Prey,
17 Who e'er i'th' Grove saw the Lordly Bull,
18 Sigh to the fair, She like a loving Fool.

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Title (in Source Edition): Against Free-Will. A SONG.
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Genres: song

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D'Urfey, Thomas, 1653-1723. New poems, consisting of satyrs, elegies, and odes together with a choice collection of the newest court songs set to musick by the best masters of the age / all written by Mr. D'Urfey. London: Printed for J. Bullord ... and A. Roper ..., 1690, pp. 76-77. [16],207,[1]p. (ESTC R17889) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Bodleian Library [Harding C 1197 (1)].)

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