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As when the treach'rous quicksand bids
Unwary rustic swain tread path unsure,
Though seeming firm, he sets his cloddish foot
In obstinate bog, and sinks precipitate
Through ooze profound, drinking the while his fill
Of filth and slime, so Satan's crafty spouse,
The mistress Sin, sore-tempts her hellish mate
To leave his thoughts of vengeance absolute
And find consolement rare and sweet in arms
Of carrion concubine. His brutish mind
With jocund thoughts lascivious inflamed
Envisions bliss renewed (O world of vain
Delights!) in license rude, and like the Jove
False pagans fabled takes on bestial form
(With his foul temperament agreeing best)
To soothe desire's burning in his heart.
Thus Satan to his wife approaching nigh:
"If thou beest she; But O how ugly! That she
Whom mutual league and conjoint enterprise
The honoured wife of Satan made, his spouse,
His mistress, and his paramour, of joys
His partner, and of woes his healing balm,
And anodyne, at whose sight all the fiends
Hide their disgusted heads; to thee I call,
But with no lover's voice, and add thy name
O Sin, to tell thee how I hate thy face
That brings to my remembrance to what depths
I fell, and what eternal lot is mine."
Thus spoke the fierce Archangel, fiery fiend,
And was the first to hide his lustful thoughts
Behind a mask of high disdainful scorn
To make his mirthful mate more tractable
To all venereal schemes his brain could form.
But Sin, the Stygian matron, nothing loath
To brave the bitter words of Satan's wiles,
Stands undiscomforted, with aspect meek,
And to her fell companion thus replies:
"It is not meet that friends fast sworn and true,
In love compact, should thus debate and give
To Vigilance Eternal cause to say
That Hell knows neither vows nor loyal pair.
I never shall believe, tho' sworn on Styx,
That Satan is indifferent to the joys
He takes from his beloved spouse. For I
Have often heard thee sigh, when to the world
Thou though'st thy bed-mate's keen audition closed
That thou hast never felt in Hell or Heav'n,
One half the joys thou drinks't from proffered cup
Of Sin, thy dearest child." Thus ceased the vile
Enchantress, but the lust of Satan's flesh
Could never cease, and to his paramour
He says, with ribald countenace abashed:
"Beloved, if to thy high mind and soul
Divine I failed to render homage due
I renovate my fault, forgiveness beg,
And freely state 'fore all the world and you
Thy front begrimed and visage putrefied
Doth frighten only milk-sop mewling boys,
Taunt-couriers of all-spiteful God, who sends
His angels here to mock thy surface form.
But these shows be but outward seen, and who
So fond to nominate external for
Internal man, or woman (oft'ner doomed
Most falsely by her surface frailties).
Not Satan fond, nor fooled by thy obtuse
Without, to seek his joy in beauteous face
Benign that promises a heaven's bliss
But hides a hellish mind. Embracing you
I pioneer the utmost verge and clime
Of Empery's enjoyment and possess
A Paradise within thee, happier far."
Thus saying, Satan seized his sordid spouse
And with suspiring sighs surprised her sense,
Meaning to take his pleasure there, and joy
Obscene, but she, defending Sin's repute
(For even villains have a sense of shame)
Leapt backwards letting greedy Satan slip
To ground, abject and ignominious
His fall. The save thrust of husband's will
Thus parrying, sweet Sin stands mute, the while
Dejected Satan to his wife complains:
'It is your duty, haughty bride, to serve
Your lord and master's ev'ry wish. If I
Perceive the faintest motion retrograde
In you I will not cease until I take
My plaint on High, and seek in Heaven's grand
Tribunal just divorce from she who makes
My life a Hell for me." So Satan seeth'd.
But his fair compeer only laughs to hear
A fiend thus call on Heaven, and replies:
"A likely hearing thou should'st get, my lord,
Impartial trial and august judgment fair
From God and his empanelled Angels twelve,
Who know too well and to their cost thy faith
And will reject thy sland'rous perjured oaths
As I reject thy proffered pleas of love."
Thus saying, Sin departs, and leaves her spouse
To sigh his sorrows forth in plaintive voice:
"Is this the liberty and promised land
For which I bartered Heaven, throne of light,
And seat celestial?" Here Satan paused
But how the Fiend continued his lament
I must not here relate, my Muse forbids
That I bestain my holy verse with words
As vehement and vulgate foul as those
Employed by the hellish hound in his despair.
But if the ancient Enemy of Man,
Whom poets in after ages styled Old Nick,
Mephisto, Lucifer, and Mister Scratch,
This battered hulk of proud, angelic bark,
Can feel the chafe of choking marriage yoke,
Shall Man himself endure the parlous fate
Of prisoned bed connubial? Not so,
And let no carping or defaming tongue
Say Milton, English Bard, the Scourge of Kings,
And Liberty's Defender, speaks to free
A roving eye and heart licentiate.
My heart is pure, and never strays from home,
Fair domicile, though married to puling wench,
To puling wench though married, and in-laws vile.
Not Thee, mean I, O Sacred Muse, though oft
With Thee I sleep, and take a husband's joy
In thy sweet converse amorous, but she
To whom I waken must each morn when from
My watchful slumbers I am rudely ripped
By raucous rant of wretched lady's wrath,
My wife. So scorn not him, who thee adores,
For Thou art Heavenly, she a nightmare grim.
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