Venice masks

Thursday, 26 October 2023

Fair Ladies are Delicate Things - Dugald Buchanan

                    [1.]
Fair Ladies are Delicate Things
The Pleasure and Joy of Man’s Life
Companions for Nobles & Kings
And who would not have a Good Wife1

                    [2.]
Sir Richard2 well what do you mean
Are they not the fair Authors of Strife
What impudent Jades have I seen
And who would be plaug’d with a Wife

                    [ 3.]
When we are incumbered with Care
They help to support a man’s life
The half of the Burden they Share
And who could not have a Good Wife

                    [4.]
They plunder our Silver & Gold
And trifle about to the life
And often are given to Scold
And who would be Plaugd wt a Wife

                     [5.]
You’re turned a quarrelsome Elf
So full of Contention & Strife
You have come from a Woman yourself
And why Should you hate a good Wife

                       [6.]
I hate not a Woman he Cry’d
But oh! the Sad name of a Wife
I cannot endure to be ty’d
A Slave all the Days of my life

Dugald Buchanan (1716 - 1768) Scotland
  1. The last two lines of each stanza are repeated
  2. Possibly Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729), co-founder of The Spectator, and a playwright and author whose themes included women and ethics, and who visited Scotland in 1717

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