Amores

Ovid

Ovid. Ovid's Art of Love (in three Books), the Remedy of Love, the Art of Beauty, the Court of Love, the History of Love, and Amours. Dryden, John, et al., translator. New York: Calvin Blanchard, 1855.

  1. A hundred eyes had Argus, yet the while
  2. One silly maid did all those eyes beguile;
  3. Danae, tho' shut within a brazen tow'r,
  4. Felt the male virtue of the golden show'r;
  5. But chaste Penelope, left to her own will
  6. And free disposal, never thought of ill;
  7. She to her absent lord preserv'd her truth,
  8. For all th' addresses of the smoother youth,
  9. What's rarely seen, our fancy magnifies;
  10. Permitted pleasure who does not despise ?
  11. Thy care provokes beyond her face, and more
  12. Men strive to make tho cuckold than the whore.
  13. They're wondrous charms we think, and long to know
  14. That in a wife enchants a husband so:
  15. Rage, swear, and curse, no matter, she alone
  16. Pleases, who sighs, and cries, " I am undone."
  17. But could thy spies say, " We have kept her chaste,"
  18. Good servants then, but an ill wife thou hast;
  19. Who fears to be a cuckold is a clown,
  20. Not worthy to partake of this lewd town,