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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 20. ...then add two lovely boys...
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Two John Wilmot Poems
[If] I could love thee till I die,
Would'st thou love me modestly,
And never press, whilst I live,
For more than willingly I would give:
Which should sufficient be to prove
I'd understand the art of love.
I hate the thing is called enjoyment:
Besides it is a dull employment,
It cuts off all that's life and fire
From that which may be termed desire;
Just like the bee whose sting is gone
Converts the owner to a drone.
I love a youth will give me leave
His body in my arms to wreathe;
To press him gently, and to kiss;
To sigh, and look with eyes that wish
For what, if I could once obtain,
I would neglect with flat disdain.
I'd give him liberty to toy
And play with me, and count it joy.
Our freedom should be full complete,
And nothing wanting but the feat.
Let's practice, then, and we shall prove
These are the only sweets of love.
—John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester[i]
1672
Upon His Drinking a Bowl
Vulcan, contrive me such a Cup
As Nestor used of old;
Show all thy skill to trim it up,
Damask it round with Gold.
Make it so large that filled with Sack
Up to the swelling brim;
Vast toasts on the delicious lake,
Like ships at sea may swim.
Engrave no battle on his cheek,
With war I've naught to do;
I'm none of those that took Maastricht,
Nor Yarmouth leaguer knew.
Let it no name of planets tell,
Fixed stars or constellation;
For I am no Sir Sidrophel,
Nor none of his relation.
But carve thereon a spreading vine,
Then add two lovely boys;
Their limbs in amorous folds entwine,
The type of future joys.
Cupid and Bacchus my saints are,
May drink and love still reign;
With wine I wash away my cares,
And then to c*nt again.
—John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester[ii]
1673
Bartolomeo Manfredi, Bacchus and a Drinker, circa 1600
[i] “[If] I could love thee till I die” John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester The Complete Poems (Las Vegas 2006), ps. 87-88 under the spurious title “The Platonic Lady”, which was added as gay-erasure by an editor two decades after the poet’s death.
https://archive.org/details/completepoemsofe0000roch/page/86/mode/2up
[ii] “Upon His Drinking a Bowl” John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester The Complete Poems (Las Vegas 2006), ps. 99-100
https://archive.org/details/completepoemsofe0000roch/page/98/mode/2up
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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