The Curtezan unmasked or, The Whoredomes of Jezebel Painted to the Life: With Antidotes against them, or Heavenly Julips to cool Men in the Fever of Lust.

by: Anonymous

Publisher: DigiLibraries.com
ISBN: N/A
Language: English
Published: 3 months ago
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The lips of a strange woman drop as an honey-comb, and her mouth is smoother then oyl: But her end is bitter as wormwood, and sharp as a two-edged sword.


The Text here presents you with a strange woman; with whom though I desire not to procure you a familiar acquaintance, yet I'le give you such cognizance of her, and excite that abhorrency of her baseness in all your minds, that if any have heretofore been sick for want of her company, he shall now be as sick of it; after I have made it appear that this

beautiful Siren, having a Womans face, ends in the Serpents tail; and discovered, not onely theVirgins-faceof this unsatiableHarpye, but her cruel talons also shrowded under her wings. That you may therefore (asAmnondid uponTamar) bolt the door upon thisstrange woman, and no longer endure thewhoredomsof this paintedJezebel; I'le endeavour to characterize her to you, and by the infallible clue of Truth conduct you through all her intricate and winding Labyrinths. Be pleased therefore, for the explication of the word [Strange] to take notice, that this Epithite was by theGræciansattributed to their common Prostitutes, which they calledξενας,strangers: And hence, I conceive, it was that the Comœdian calledGlyceriumwho was thought to live by the unlawful submission of her body,Peregrinam, a stranger, a strange woman. But I have onely hitherto told you her name; I shall now therefore proceed further to describe her to you by her sordid actions, which will ascertain you of those miseries which are her constant waiting-women or attendants. That I may therefore speedily prosecute my design, She is one whom notArgus's hundred eyes, norbrazenwalls, nor the most vigilant Guards can secure from her lascivious incontinency: the bars and hedges which Nature has made for hertongues confinement are not sufficient to restrain it within the limits of a modest discourse; and should we lock up her impure lips with a command of silence, yet could we never limit the infiniteness of her lascivious thoughts, with which she would as freely commit fornication, as if she were at liberty, and in the enjoyment of the greatest voluptuary; and we may say of her whatScipioin another case said of himself,She is never less alone than when alone. She tricks her self up with such variety of gauderies as if she were to expose her body to bring the Devil to her lure, andtempt the Tempter himselfto love her; and were that opinion ofTertulliantrue, That theDevilsandfallen Angelshad carnal commerce with theDaughters of Men, and they should desire one to satisfie their lustful appetite, I'de recommend the strange woman in the Text unto them; who (likeCirce) is an amiable Sorceress, and when she hathoncecharmed herGallantwith youthful blood sparkling in his veins, and beauty dancing in his face, into the endless Circle of her lust, hee'l find a difficult recovery.Physitians tell us, that the reason we have in Feverish distempers ourParoxysmebut every second, third, or fourth day, and not at every circulation of the blood about the body, is, because the blood when it arrives to the heart must acquire such a degree of corruption before it can effect it, and therefore because this corruption is not sensible before many circulations have been performed, it cannot so soon create aParoxysme: But in this impure and libidinous strumpets heart 'tis far otherwise; for she endures the Paroxysmes of theFeverofLustevery hour and moment, and thecirculationof her lusts in her heart is sooner performed then that of her blood....

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