a dialogue between a married lady and a maid
DESCRIPTION
A dialogue between a Married Lady and a MaidFront CoverNicolas Chorier1740 - 47 pagesTRANSCRIPT
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AD IA L 0 G U 12'BETWEEN '
A -MARRIED LADY
AND
-A M*AID.
L O N D O N:
Printed in the Year M-D CC.XL.
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wezieeeer-zeeezaxeeeee -A
DIALOGUE' BETWEEN
'A Married LADY
AND
A M A 1 D.*
T-ULLXA andOcTAvui.
TUL. Am extremely well pleaed, dear' Child, to hear that at la thou artgoing to be married to young Pilander, for
in his Arms you will nd uch Pleaures, asthou wilt ealy pronounce that Night inwhich he makes thee a Woman, ' to be the
happie of thy Life; I only wih Venrumaybe as favourable to thee in the Enjayment,
as he has been in giving thee o much heavenly Beauty to prepare thee For it.
OCT AVIA. Indeed my Mother thisMoming told me, that after To-morrow I mui
A 3 * - marry.
-
[5]marry PH/ander ; and gccordingly atHomed
I ee all Things pjeptlxig for the Ceremo- ct
ny ;_ my LChamber, my Bed, my Nightcloathzeavery 'bodfis buz inomnh'
about '; and yet, met s, all thee 'L \ iead of giving me joy, ll me with a cer- * J
tain Fear and Apprehenon, of which I can -give no Account, no more than I am ableto underand or conceive with what Pleaure
it is you o much talk of.- * TUL. I do notwonder at all, that being
o young, carce having pa Fifteen, thouhould have no Idea ofa Thing, which Iwyfe-if, being two Years older- when I married, had not the Underaxlding of 1
But, prithee, 'tell_me, art thou not enble,that there is omething that Pbilanzler longer and ghs for P' ' 'And drf thou not iind in
him ome Languihings, that expres vehementDeres? ' - *zOc-r. I canno't ay that -I am altogether
- ignbradt of what his Eyes, his Face, his Per--on, and auhis Actions, 'tell me every Day;
nay, i mu own, that about a Week ago,while we 'were ce together, he ruhed into' my Arms, and fell a kimg me with uch
violent Tranports, that I could not but won" der, what that Heat and udden Fury
meant. *TUL. Thy Mother was out of the Way,there was no body but yourelves ; and I
imagine you feared nothing from him- butay, did he ak nothing but Kies -?
- - Our,
l
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67" I 'ocr. At limit-aim even thoe 'from me *with ome 'Reluctandy ; but he 'gave themwith uch Ardour, 'that I felt 'on a udden,a certain Warmth run thro' my Veins, and 'a Trembling in all my Limbs, that I was
uiius'd to;* but heiaw me bluh as red' asFire, which made him hold a. little, and- 'take back hisHand, which already he had -
iptinto-rny Breas. - -TUL. Very well ; go on '
Oc-r. I hate thoe impnden*t Hands 'ohis z *having oberved, that, for all my Bluhing,- I did not much chide him, as indeed I could
not, he laid me along upon the Conch uponwhich I at, and keeping me down with hisLeft-hand, as ealy he mi ht, in the Diorder I was in, he put his ight-hand undermy Coats ; I am ahamed to tell you the
re, dear Coun, excue me,TUL. Prithee, Fool, leave on"this illy *Bahulnes, and think what thou ayTt to
me, thou ay' to thyelf. ' 'Oc*T. Having turned up my Coats, andmy Smock, a little above my Knees, he be
an to feel my Thighs ; and if you had buteen how his Eyes parkled; then lifting his
Hand up, he took hold othat Place whichdiinguihes us from Men.
'I'UL. Well aicLPLZ/ander, ha, ha, hazlOCT. This, this Place, aid he, mll make_me the happiei: Man in- the World ; let mealone, my Octa-via : All this while I was
out ofmyelf, he put his Finger intostlliiz
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-[- a; ]: -Slit, which is a very little-one, and hecould hardly get it well" in', 'becaue 'I feltome little.Pain ; but at the ame Time he * -cried out, O l have a Maid! A Virgin tomy Share! And immediately opening myLegs with Force, he threw 'himelf betweenthem at upon his Face.* * -
TUL. Did you feel nothingele but hisFinger? ' ' '
OcT. I did; But what an Impudence ismine, to relate that which remains !
' TUL. Prithee, as ifI had not felt the ameThing before. Go on. *
LOCT. I felt then between my Legs ome- -thing iand warm, endeavouring to forceitsiPaihge 'into me; but I having gathered T
Strength, turned upon my Side, and threwhim out; then clapping my Hand betweenmy Legs, in the Place where the Battery *had been' erected, I preently felt my Hand -
and my Belly, as far as - my Navel, all wet *with awarm Shower which owed' from _
him : It felt thick and limy, which mademe withdraw my Hand, and he immediately
giving me a thouand Kies, eized both,and wiped them with his Handkerchief.
- TUL, I ee he was very near gaining anentire Victory, but- too much Vigour deprived him of it. Say, m pretty Octa-via,
h*ow did thou like him a ter this EOCT. To tell you the Truth, from thatDay forwards, he was infmitely more plea- ing unto me, and has kindledin me a- Deiz?-
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[9]of omething, I know not what it is, whichmakes me perpetually Reles : I dizeam ofhim all Night, and expect from' him omegreat joy, what it is l cannot. tell : I expect'and wih forit, and could be content Pbil-*under had uch another Opportunity, to try
what would come of it. 'TUL. What would you do, if he had P'
Ocr. You may anwer yonrelf, for Icannot,- but omething more I would do,
which 'would make him more happy, and"'me more learned. [had carce put down:
my Coats, and he put in his shirt, whichhung out of his Brceches, when my Mother
camein; * - - -wToe Woebe to thee, Iknow her Save:
Hey - ; ' - '-
'niling ad, how we- both ttame by uchaColour; then ittin down by Pan-navy;
told him, within 'a Iy or two, he hopedto make him the happie Man in the World)
He bowed repectzl, and bein lbmewhat-out of C untenanc for me, aid, you do
not take e Way, *dam, to makp Gauvoid loe the Colour you tax her with 2' For
an. Yet manie nothing harh, only '
he is o mode, thftt 'the lea Thou ' hts of *having a Bedfeliowgcovers her a over
with deep Vermion; After fameWFjpremnsgixd wenvout of the Rodm and
eft us. 7 ' "* '- iFUL. What did your Mother ay then?
* - Cor-
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[to]
OCT. She began to ak me, what had pabetween us, and commanded me to hide
nothing from her ; I begun to excue myelf,and complaind he had over-powei-'dme ; he - -
ailed me immediately, if he had entred me,I aid no ; upon which he gave me a Cau
tion, not to let him any more take the ameLibertyibeore Marriage; for, aid he, moMen are for that bae Principal, that they
either never marry thoe they have enjoyed,or corn them afterwards when they do:
Few are o generous, asto be thankful totheir Mirees for yielding to Love, but
had rather owe their joys to the -Formalityof a Peron, than to the free Conceions
ofBeauty enamd by ju Deres; a'nd tho'they have made the ame Vows in Private,- that they made in Publick, at their wedding,
yet contemn Women for believing themwithout a.- Witnes. For ever after, hewatch'd o narrowly, that Pi/andn never.ound me alone. -'
* TUL. Well, my Octazvia, *I love thee forbeing o ineere in the Account thou hagiven me, and to hew thee, that I will be
o too, Imu: tell thee, that my own Mother* et me on to pump thee, about what
pa between you two, and to inh-uct you-again the wedding-night, to prepare thee,
for a better Bedellow, which thou wilthave To-rnorrow.
- t rl *l -''*
DiAe
. .'.'7 7
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[II]
-__-j,'__i---.
DXALOGUE IL-
OcTAvuu, OW, my obliging Tulliii,from whom I am to learn*Secrets I cannot yet comprehend, let us lie
in one apothexds Arms, and talk; all the
Houe is aeep, Silence reigns in every Partof it, and we may enjoy ourelves without-any Diurbances.
TUL. This Silence andQiiet in the Fa=mil ,-To-morrow Night, would be to the'
an thy Pbi/ander much more welcome ;but, inead of that, there will be 'nothingbut Noie about you, till you are both a Bed,
and People placed in every Comer, to hearwhat you do and ay; andif the Bed hakes,as certainly it will, upon the r Eager
'nes of enjoying thee, thou wilt hear themwithput Laugh and Giggle, to the no mall
Diappointment ofthy Pleaure at r.OCT. I hope my 'Mother and you will' take care o to =c1ear the Coa, as no Men
Vor Women but yourelves hall-be privy -toour Endearments, and that at a Diance too.
TUL. I will in thatberiend thee, or elethou wilt be expoed next Day to a hundred Railleries from the Men, which willmake thee Mad. *
Oc-r. Lord! How much am I to endure,on all Sides, bo"th* from Pbilander and *hiTs
Friends then-V?
* TU-L.
-
in]* TVL. As for Pin/under, I own thou wilthave omething to uer from him, but he,will make thee amends in Time. Now I-will tell thee how all will happen, *
OcT. Teach me exactly every 'Thing thatis t for me to know 3 what Sort of Pain itwill be, how long it will la ; I had ra
ther have it harp and hort, than have itla, tho' moderate.
- TUL. That Part of thy Body which isunder the Belly, between the Thighs, to
which Men give o many Names, but ischiey called by them C-t, and which i'o prettily fhaded with Hair, is the Field
where Pbilandcr will 'begin the Fight ; younever 'yet oberved the Make of it, and'therefore I will decribe it unto thee. *Wirh
out is a long Slit, and which in Women thatare mo made for Etoyment, is high andforward upon the Belliy, and not low and
backward, as ome Women have it, morelike Cows than Wpmen. The true Proportion is, that when we lie along with our-Legs cloe, two good Fingers Breadth m ybe een of the Slit above our Thighs. T is-Slit is made with two Lips, which- being
opened gently, dicover another inward asred as a Cherry, with two other Lips, which
are called Wings, or Nymphs; and under -them, about a Fingers Breadth, or more,within, are in Virgins, as thou art, four little ring Beds, which, joining together, andleaving only a little Hole-between, op Zp
- t e-
-
a ~ ~ ~ "mits]
the be Part of the Paage into the Womb,and gives all the Trouble Men meet with i',deouring us, and all the Pain we feel, i'upon the breaking thro' them with Violence.for then they fall a Bleeding and mart exeeedingly.
Oc-r. I do foreee, that in the Attempt.* there will be a great deal of Pain ; for l my
elf can carce endure to touch them with mylittle Finger. '
TUL. Let me nih my Decription. atbefore them, towards the u r Part o the'
C-t, isa Thing they call liffif, which, 1- 'is a little like a Man's P-k, for it will well,
and and like his; and being rubbed gently,- by his Member, wizl, with exceive Plea
ure, end 'forth a Liquor, which whenitcomes aw y, leave us in a Trance, as ifwe '
were dying, all our Senes being lo, and asit were ummed up in that one Place, and
our Eyes hut, pur Hearts languihing onone Side, our Limbs extended, and, in aWord, there follows a diolving of our'vliole Peron, and melting in- uch inexpre
ble joys, as none but 'thoe who feel them'caneztpres or comprehend. *Thati.which
embraces the Man*s -Member, when in? in,Fit; 'calledthe Sheath; and takes uch a 'fa
'lojlgi or it in fuiti*onhat n'is" like a*GlqveFzre rungs, andlb itsl Wamih with the Moz*-ftion e Boliy, iiiakeitjrtlvlen die with
**P'ledqrc;*'a,rl'*at-la,dthd a? they cuit,"-z-'z1 , Braita'i- J.. zun)
*ti
-
"T
z
'~'
-{ 14]
y great Wantity d Liquor, which all wetsboth within and without.* Oc-r. You decribe Things o exactlyJhat'methinks I ee all that is within me. -
* - TUL. In thee, that inward Slit, and theSheath, are very rait and narrow. Letme ee it a little; open your Legs.' Oc-r. I do; what do you ee now?
TUL. Ah! Pretty Creature' How Cherryred it is! I ee all the Flower of thy Virgimnity, as entire as a Morning Roe-bud, net
'_ reach'd by a Travellex-'s Hand, and weeter -* than any Roe in its Enjoyment.
' OCT. O hold, Tul/ia, you tickle me o,' that I am not able to endure it; take away
that wicked Finger, it hurts me.TUL. Well* I pity thee rangely ; thispretty Shell, prettier than that out of which
Venus herelf was born, will be adly tornby Pbilander; nay, l begin to be concernzed for him to ; for the Entrance ofthis Pa
Bdieis o narrow, that it will be with greaticulty, and no mall Pain, e'er thatyhehimelfwill get admittance; did you everee the Thing he has between his Legs P
L_ 'J Ocm, I negr aw it, bt*u* felt it hard,--big.and lbng.* _-H TUL. Thy- Mdthe*ria okjerjoycd with tlie' J Reputation has of beirigzhe be pmvided
- 'young Man* inall this - ty, but willeg -"thee ome Tears z. yet *e nqt i aid, zrny
Huhand had the me Reputatior*i* withReaon, and*y*e'i' alive 'at*id*syh*e' *
- CcT.
-
'[ 15]
*OcT. Prithee, let me ee how your C-t,is, nce it had uch a Moner within it.
TUn. Do, my pretty Octamia; here, Iopen my Legs a Purpoa.
Oc-r. Lord! What a Gapis here! I canthru my whole Hand in almo ; how
rong it mells ! Sure the Roes are all gonehere, which you nd in mine,
TUL, You are very pleaant; but whenonce you have had a Child, you willbe as
Izm ; for this is a neceary Conequence: of
Marriage.OCT. Well, go on, and tell me how r* I hall be made a Women from a Maid,
that now l am.TUL. Fir, lwill decribe unto thee, theMan's Member, and then lwill tell you,the Ue thereof. There is between the
Thighs, ju at the Bottom of the Belly, aPiece of Fleh. which. when it is not em-*
loyed for our Pleaure, hangs looefbobbing here and there ; but when our Beauty* excites it, ands hard and rm, and grows
at lea as long, and as thick again, as atany other Time. In ordinary Men, 'tis
about even or eight of their own ThumbsBreadth long, when it ands, and about our
otheir Thumbs in Compas : But, in thoe(whom Nature has favoured, 'tis about ten
or eleven of their Thumbs Breadth long.and x or more in Compas, as I have een
my Huhand meaure his, and make me doit in wanton Humour. The Head of it
* ' B z is
-
16]
is 07' ne Carnation, and over it is alooe Skin which they draw backward: and
forwards, and which contributes omething'to our Plcaure in its Motion: The Fleh
oit is ot and rm, and of a delicate Sene,oas they feel us when we pend upon it:All round about the Root of it, is a greatdeal of ne hort Hair, generally morethanwith us 3 undemeath, hangs in 'a Bag,
or Pure, two little Balls, pretty hard, andthe harder the better, they call them Stones,
and in them is contained that white thickLi nor, which comes out from them withuc Tranports to make us Mothers; they
call it Sperm and Seed, and when theirVeels are full of it, they come often to'als, and charge us Home, till all their Powder be pent.
Oer. l believe Plvilander has a ood Stocl:of it, for he wet all my Belly andgmy shift,
with that warm Shot-ver._ TUL. You will like him much better;when it is hot into you z for it comes out
with that Force, that it leaps two Foot ormore from 'em noon pending; and then a
Woman mu behery inenble, that is notpleaed 10 ee the joys he 'gives "em, whichthey expres iy a thouand Nlurtnurs, 'and
kind dying Wot-ds ;" and now I will ' tell-thee all, how 'it paskl between me andFar-cries When I was (rit married unto
-m- ' ' '
i 'i y -- zocjrc
-
[r7]'
Oer. I' long=to hear that, becaue an Example, zis walways more full of Inrnction,
than any bare Advice.31'117.. As oon as my Mother had put meto Bed, the gently put a ne Hankerchief
under my Pillow, and bid me ue it whenI wanted to wipe myelf or my Huhand :then * en me and Her-alo kind Kies, hewith ew, and carried with her all the Company, except Pampanizgwho had hid her
elf' o il , that he did not perceive her :She had een married about two Months, -'and! had * received from her kind Inructions, the good Oce I now do thee, and'twas out of Dere to ee how I could behave myelf, that he lurked behind theHangings, in a Cornerof the Room. As
oon as the Company was- gone, and theRoom ill and quiet, 'tho lighted witha Flambeaux at a Diance, which made itvery clear, Haratio, turning towards me,
and taking me in his Arms, with parkling Eyes r gave me a Kis ; then unty- -
mg with one Hand my Smoek. he viewedmy Breas, which were white, round and
rm, upon which he beowed" as manyKies, as if they had been the only Obcts -of his Deres. ucking my Nipples, andthen queezing and preing them- with his-
Hand. But this Time I elt omething thro'his Shirt very preng again my Thigh,
which when, by my Bluhing, he found]had perceived, he threw o the Cloaths,
- B 3 x and0
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threw all the Cloath: from me. and- whil
[jits I.
and taking up his' ow' Linnen, Meed- m'along tiff-headed P-ck: hie-Skin jkndm
Shape were admirable, the one being cleanand well proportiod, the other whitey *'
Snow. and only here and thers, NPOUwUT'-Brea and Belly, haded with ome)
brown Hair; l turned away my Eyes. e-* i' -ing all covered with red: Upon that*he
I innocenzly endeavoured, with my Hands. -to hide that whichy I thought was a Shame
to have expoed to his View, he ed hisEyes with the Propect of the re- of my
Peron, kiling m Broas. my Belly, my'highg in a Wor , all that- he coid come -
at; then taking away my Hand. whichhid from him me 'Place o: m; - joys, he! *
gently put his Fore-nger into my C--:,and thru ita little Way up, till he met
with a Stop, and! complained he humane: -This he did on Purpoe, to be atised- whe
ther I was a- Maid or not as afterwards- hehimelf coneed. '
Oc-c- See the cunning of thee Men!-TUL. A- trueMaid, as thou an, and I *was, are o' far from taking it ill at theirHan, that .we are extreamly pleaed to
gite them that Proof of our Intirenes, and'tis mo certain, that in thoe that are o;the Marks of it are plain, and ealy di
coveralzle, at lea. till twenty Years old,When Horartia was atised, that none had
hcen there before him, he began to ue- thekinde
*..-**--*zs-_ -* w- m, -_ --ww-_--L_ a-
-
- - wi_----
i[-'19-]='
kinc. agmrqqsz-Wordg in- the Vrld- myzrue. KXYJZHFJH' mad-is zs' -bic=-Li5=z; his- JQY. 1
anzizto qirgnzgx-a; Llov, king, t9yhcz hll* - -nds-m le: him; dxxwhatsht hadr aiMind to, zwibzxvtaanxl-Zndrance; - - q
NCT! Adldidzgollz' *' a: - x ; 1
Tvzn. was m edes mycihaxlknew z'nwhatto kbii his Peron appeaxedwmolkw,l0Y?-17tin'-W_Yx-A-\> ==\*-11!Q0ct\11dx\0t,-me-* * '
thonghtn-Iindvin- guy-Ham no- thru lniaway= Imm- my- 'Embxzceg He- (am I ea*
gan- to be moved-and preently opening my P;Lg*gxas wide as h @9'}1d)-hF-Z9Fbe\YVe?Q zthem upenhis Knees a-zz 'm uxming my -Smqckz up under my Chin, ear-si- lipping
both hisandsxander my Bntmdzz he pulf- -my Heazlzquixe from the- Pillow, that my
Body might zlie high, And be the n*wxtcxq 4poed tg Vi-ew z' then gently etting hixnef
down, hgwjghpnc Hand oftlyopqned theoutward Lips ofmy Slit, gndzintroyduccd the
Head of his Yard into ki- Oc-r. Were you dumb all this- while ?
' TUL. My Sighs and Bluhes were all theInterruptionz I gave him, longingl mut -confes, as much to ee what would conzeof his Endeavours, as he could to perform
ll*. y */'
.Oc-r. Now I tremble for thee. .TUL. Having placed himelf in this Pofmre, he bid me take fa hold of him a
bon: the Middle, and thruing with anhis Fore; towards me, he endcavourcd, bu;
- m
w
-
[ azoi ']
in nzisz/czi'vhpen r1izzre1-'w@yrmzaj- 'aged -ed' tPal-tst' 'foxy-"hv-liad 'not*thrtkll%'=abbvd>fione -or*tee,-in f*ihich'Time-zhe Ya '-nO'riI3'- =
adt*r1rmce-*n - RIEBR-ht -i elf hid-T Member-Agrow lank and oft, andlfduntlfzlnyi*ellldve ='
lwet; I preenzy reaclfdvthelfidlcerthict
1behind the? iwgvmd weml to wlpzrzmylel"'*but*he*fbok *the* dcd* taid the; 'did it for *us"boh,- *bel'towis11g**one:atthe>"ame Time; trinity-burning' ies" &ndz-lgnrlz
guihingusoks; This r Actaek= wgt :wi*tlibiit 'ome "Pain, whenz bepreeeb' eryiizhdrabht noa envqght td make mecry 'may- elf If wi; But jezlegiiihing, whenzjend-'iz
- ded--Ate?*h1is-,1=l1e>keed &Peixnulya 'in* byixfe? hekik- one 'of nzzbzasas; [hind'pu *iict-ng' =itz td- his yMouth, 'k-iiIZidzjit*y--tlien *'- lopkzingiahznz-znoa meJzecv-inelxac, my -
deate Tullizctz, bite 17 lbvethee more than my
Eyes ; 'my ' *L*r'e.,= hething chn1lehando' mer than thoudrr-P *Howz prettily thy Brea,
lie pantin ! How-hard theyare' !l How -ound -' ow1handomely parted one from'another-I tfaying this, lie-kiled my Nippies, ucked thorn, and fooled with' mea '
hundred Ways: I began to nd myelfwarmed by, l know not what Deres;and turning towards .him, I re aid hisKies with lntere; then he ipc his
Hands between my Legs, and playing gent.ly' n-ith the light brown Hair- about my
Belly, o'fwhieh have a great Deal, he admired the pretty Eects or' its shade upon- l
- a
' 3**Y'*'***'- * ' 5' m-L- --- 4.- Q-g-e
-
[21]a white Shin: Then opening oftly theLips of my C-t, and putting in now oneFinger, than another, made me almo Mad.Put away that vexatious Hand, aid I, whydo you tormemt me Z He began to Laugh,'nding he had irred me? and taking his
Left-hand, and putting his Member into it,take, my dearc Tullia, aid he, a better
and pleaanter Inrument, and t it thyel to the Place of my joys. 'I 'being
grown boldcr, becaue I was more dercouato ee the End, took it and 'twas as muchas m Hand could well gra ---Courage,aid he, my pretty Rogue, et us try oncemore, that thy Mother may not find the
a l/laid To morrow, to my Shame. I anwered,I never can endure it, it will 'fplitme in two, good] kill me, if all this mugained my ody. Do thou guide it, aid
e, and' before you*do not letit ip adeI obeyed him', and once more, with allhis Force, he thru at me zJ but nding it
advance but little, he made me lift' u ,oneof mv Thighe, 'which he embraqe withone o? hisArms. I uered ome Thruh,
even very "rong ones, very zP*atiently ; a atla, he begq*n* to driye it in- fwithuch Fu.
ty, that] Wa? notable to' endur*z"tjte- Painany longer, and 'gave a great Stclz; andEt go my Hold, crying, Oh ! Youxlc*ill nue,
idear Horatin, I am not able to bear it, and *u/ithal ome Tent-p fell from my Eye , tich
was the Smartnel*s of the Pain.* * n thei mean
-
' - i-v-r '.""l'
tzzi- Jhean Time, he had got in about two Fin
gers Breadth, when I felt myfel wet withanother warm Shower, as I had been at r.'In all this I felt no Pleaure, only a mall
Tickling, which did a little*mitigate theSharpnes of what I endured, - Haratia be- -ing got ome again, began to complain ofmy Unkindnes, in the Diurbanee I' gavehim in thoe joys that he degnecto makeme tae; and aid, if thou do 'love me,Tullia, thou woulde never deny me* to gather thetnie Fruit of thy Enjoyment. I x
love thee, aid 'I, my deare: *Hm-atiu, with'all my Soul; but what waxen thou ha*veme to do in lqhisirnierable Pain 'that I en-'
dure? Iam ure, if thou did know 'theSharpnes jok ithyou wivould haiye Compaf-Vion of your pom- Trillia;* but VI not-difpute' an ' longer, aid] ? hew- thoJ 'Obe-j
diena-Qlzr, a- Vlife, if joull- tke'upon you"'oncemdreTheAutlwnty of afI-Iiifand. Hent*l*ed at my Application of 'thoe Thin s,
bid m*c-prepare for a. new Atxack; or *by thisYTime, the terrible Foe 'began w raie
his' Headhq threaten my Fortwith a new,Aault. Holzl anc fa about them-idle,
aid- he, 'and when* I faint away upon thylovely, Bfes, fdrakenot 'thy Hold,thou intended to_h;ave me *for* a; - kind Hull
band, 'Ijrotnied to -'ao-;1i7he dered' of-me- ' .I y - *
_' OCTS Aniyduzzkept au'rfromie?
'**'*' - TUL.
t -
-
*[ 23 I .'rUn You hall iee. He r hut myMouth with Kies; then placing himelf* between my Legs, which he made me clap
' any great Pieaiire;
about his Back, as high as- "e could, he open
ed, with one Hand, the Lips of my C-t,and with the ame Hand, gently put in theHead ohis Member :* -I elt it go in abouttwo Fingers Breadth, without any great Di
culty; bnt then, upon a rong 'hruh Icried out, he tore me in Pieces- 'He iirtle
minding my Cries, put his Tongue in myMouth to op it ; and moving ill rong
ly on, he at Length broke thro', and got thewhole Length of his Yardint*o me. I roar- -ed then, and Tears came in my Eyes, but hewiping them, and repeating his Kies, bid
me hold lzim fa, and not ir' my Legs fromabout his Buttocks; and beginning to movegently to and fro in my L.* -t. he akedme, if I did not begin to feel omething- that made' me ome amends for all my
Pain; l aid, asit was true, that beides amall Tickling, l had no \other Sene of
immediately after, hequicker and ronger, expred the'-jinconceivable Delight which he took now"heyvas ehteii-'d and in the ame Moment, fell
zlanhing and .dying upon my Breas,'givih**'h*re'**athoulafd- Kies.- He did not
after hisgashellad' done beorog-'leavepmeand liexill, but' keeping his Hold andPlacE:
Ndw, my Trz/Yia, 'aid he? that-'l-'lrave takenPoilleilion as a "Conqueror, 'I *wi-ll not o
oon
-
[24]
oon leave it; and nce it has cot me omuch Pain, and thee uch Blood (looking
upon the Sheets, which were all ainedwith the Marks of my Virginity) I will
run one Race more in Coure of Love.Having aid this, l elt his P-ck well
within me. Now, aith he, I will make-thee hare with me in this Pleaure, if thou
wilt be ruled by me ; as I thru forward,do thou,ju 'pon my going back to makeanother Thru, follow me with thy But
tocks, from the Bed, towards me, and thenfall again, us I come with my Buttocks orward to thee. This Motion, at r, will
eem range to thee, but a little Practicewill make it eay, and exceeding pleaant.I am ure, thy Youth and Dexterity, at allother Exercies, mu make thee no Dunce atMthis. I reued, at r,-to try o odd a
Motion ; but he o intreated me, I did i;once, and then repeated it upon a econdand third Intreaty; and, in a Word, afterthat, I; commanded it for my ownPleaure
very nimbly ; for I began to feel omethingo unuual within me, that;* was almotranported. We had not long- continued,_ When' he cried out, Oh! My 'j-'xglligl Qhany Dear l And I immediatelyfttxpgome
anhing come from- me, with irzezprelible-D-elight, held him fa in- myi Armsovpand
with a-kind Mnniiur and btokenc.y-9rds.7cry'd, Oh -'*--M Haratia Z
- ou -.
-
theyr
Soul? Melt !* Oh, what iirto ee! my'-Love ! My Haratia l ~-' Tun. He embraced meill harder, andthruing his Member up as high a itwould go, after two or three more- Motions,
die'd in my Amrs, with innite Pleaure;ju as l had made an End of mine; o both
languihing, and almo weary, we lay inone mother's Arms, when from behind a
Hanging, Pampania, who had over-heardand een a great Part of our Engagements,came running to me, and catching me 'n L
ked, as I was, in her Arms, began to kii'me with'great joy, telling me how he pi-tied me, when he heard me cry out; but
that nce a kinder Sound, and ofter Expreons ofmy joy, had aured her of my Felicity; he was now at Eae. Horatz*a, was
about to put in with ome ro uih Compliment, when he ound himelf eized by ano
ther Hand, and kied as earnely z it wasmy *Mother, who gave him a thouand
Thanks, 'for having behaved himelf obravely. Thy Victory, aid he, was madeknown to -me, by Tullids Cries; but y]
make no Qieion, they will hence forward -be turned into kin*d Expreoizs between you' for ever. I was o ahamed to hear my Mo
thefs Voice o near, that I endeavoured tocover Horatia (who was almo naked) with
the Bed-Cloaths, and turn myelf under *em,not being able to look my Mother in the
Face, but he laughing, bid- Pompania pullC ' me
-
L .gzgizdl'
IF-'svatw
-
TayxmNature, 'tis egg-gain, that the Extay, at la,is uch, that tin-dhilit-Ftole neat Pain,by being o ravihingly deligluful. Horatia,
ovpfjoyed*to* ee z-me; 'Ibfdi ed; aidja'hundred kid 'Things colmei-' Inant,
callizig=mezhis Izzie; his nuhaandzaawpsng'all 'mxbfbkenr Mulmrs-_--wiqh-zhsz_h- died boimmjo Arms; _--Afm yihisyw
bqth in a hort Time fell aeepzzand. lay Lid!
kltdyithf Momg no -'*-vizIl ' Trz)
L-WOCYA F-'I-tdu-xhdfhzxsientiys paint-g-3mq,--\a==thit- ufilLWenlimdin-zlrz 'Bvaltlc-zqf--Lulruiae my 'Virgi 'ty juazbgzuxezllr-igrbi/ike Wqurnnh dam notixakan.
Ilhadeifdmodvig marrow ,udxbtzaa phgutaylzhaw hu-ihmazranm hzmhzzxgyx.pdtaidu ofufbping hither qzroyedqziapmoxMm incuzmilk Lead' flfidzufin
maz, the lea C - t, that ever wagzjzgasum*sf kcty -:ca--'ints-oae-'m=yz-Paig,'o Iopefiz-Timax-ibwl my* Pleaures; - ' ow
ever, I-am rcolved to bc*zzir all-Vpatigntly,
thzti isfozje*zrzzrne" m-Fxhksfamdife; 31 y 'FI-'ULY Izctlnnot wih- thee; dearzzOctzz..'v3c'uz,*/i dumbFain z*tlinu-L mine, qwoJxow gapZgay uj-'perhct- Fdicityzwigh my lolvelypjfoayq
i -iii! glletjus zrihoviri myzpxgctyqMzJgd, Tovza*ri'ormwfthou xviltjtzg 'bid Name for 9. he;zIQr-FTPt-hixik zhouarugcicnlynztapaxed atkhezngagepncntsiw e*kanz*zu r. grlyzsuzz
nati-A) vuii' - s? qu mazi wi alauridrnn1L-{'-iT nal -J}u*0: 7' He- Im*zu] 33,.- noiuzu, dun: om z-'JT * ct -
Ft if' C z
-
(133
Dxaeocun III.
-Tvu.u. O Day was e'er more agree' able than this Night will beany deare Octa-uia; for I hall not only en'joythy company, but a Pan: of thy- Plea
ores', by the Repetition thou wilt make ofthem to me.
Oc-r. I came on Purpoe to give my kind'Inh-uctor an' Account, how I had oberved
her Rulez and what Plenure I had found'in her Doctrine, b the Ue and Applica
tions of it. In a ord,yalltl:e jo whichyou foretold me, comes hort o- -what I
really felt, and I a*tcaincd to that Bliswvhich- equals us 'with Angels, - with les
.TonHe; much than I expected from .y.o\t
- TUr. Prithee, good Octa-z-ia, begin then'u-ikh all that happened to thee on thy' Wed.fling-Night- _ -
Oc-ru- You mu take omething that happened in the Day-rine too; o; Pbilanders'was o eager, that he did not ay till Night,
to have his Body - wearied with Dancinand Drinking, and his Fancy palld wi- the bawdy jes of a publick wedding. No
Vooner we were come from the Church, but
* r
pretending a Bunes with my Mother inPrivate, he went up Stairs into her Cloet, -not being willing to ue her Bed-chamber,leit hould laic too- much Supicion ;
" - '- * there
-
- ze'-ma
f 26 Izz--'** ',*----* 'wz--'--T'--\ -' 1-) e'-zw * in **ct to himyand' drawin 'faire2' Keep: m; hall be-gkigd re; *
tho' I belive i; will-be to little Put;i e nzher -$ide. 'Lhen calling on 'he'
Jau Inner, fair] htxyou' are now your Handqs, do whaLhe*wi'Il-'have once, but
jr*xogeg after thag*eohxeaway, ot- I hall beTLFSyIaidLIhej-clapt *t-ol
-
* no more Words,-but
I 31 ']by; then turning' to Plailandexzlzie merciful
aid he, to poor Octa-uia, for my Sake. Heputting her out of Doors, made no Reply, -but running to me, et me in the ame Poure I wasiin before, then putting one of
his Hands upon my Buttocks, which hegently thru toward him with the other,
he opened the Slit of my Commodity, andconveyed the Head of his Engine to it.Now, aid he, my dear Octarvia, embrace:
me with both Arms, and- meet with aThru, when I make one towards thee.
I do not know what you mean, aid 'I, .' norwhat you would have me to do. Hemade
began to thru at rgently, but then a little harder, and at lao rongly, that I -made no Queion but
my MaZ-denhead was in extream Danger.His Member was i' and hard as a Horn,and hurt me o, that! thought he would
plit me in two : But he little minding me,gave uch a home Thru, as made me cryout as if I had been killed. He followedit cloe. with a great many more, beggingme to hold ill, and not diappoint his rjoys. As he aid this, Iaw his Eyei turn
in his Head, and all his Body - fainting, fallupon me, and breathing out his Soul inamorous Kies, cry, my deare Dear, how
innite is my Pleaure! ju as he had'nihed, my Mother, who hadheard melhrihk. came into the =Room,-0h l Said he,
Pbiland: r, you lorgot your Pxomie ; I, atthat
" " '*"-f*'W*-H
/
-
***-
z
:_T a? Klia*rIuadn; lislt ' zomethigg zgxgmgrdinag*
come from; ma, 'and-clong any? Lfyes,taking' fa _ hold 0fz=1i*{*ldr,-z-l*5 laid--lan*guihing fHeadrizi zhizqgupsyg z-M
his Neclgz1 'andjcried' Obdiz fclllorqco weet' thaLit-kill mgzi Hzml*iaed me
ltiiidly, ndsi *eeking triyzTz-Iaipk to zlayz-his tothem,zgnade< m' ll ciiiG ITFZIXQIX:TWVTT &hbefore-bT'im3iP.d-* 52- iizzzevunja
m TUL; Thmdecribe.itzrarely well ;- butI wonderzthou hould have o muehzPlea.ure the r -Time,- for' that eldom-s happens
toilaids. -z'*z--I zit-r tri-w 1- -_31--' In
a 2 Oc-r- Venus - was kind- M_m' apd had.it eems? _prcparcd za Liquor, Which Jiowed
from mein .{*l2Cl1-'iAhU-\d3-BC&2 PzzR/Jl*lfldc;
himelf elt it', and-cried Oh! joysdo eect mi both, with-uch- a. of thisueaxianly Nectaxtas-we ars.zeaettnf us pro,
dedw-viclifvuz 17 1 Al! uz=l ,z -_ 1---*>-=TQL-.* -Well, go 0n.--;- L -j - -UOcT. As -o0n zl-zhad.-dall-e,-Pyf=ilage-dgr
out his (Thingz- 'whichz was snow grow *pa' :. humble, front =QTHQXHiR-g' -
roudthat-itwnswQFOKCAT. 39- &Pn I ajkedhim' ihe would [save any Thngmore with
me Pz-and being ahamed of my Patience-inletting him do o much already, dered him
fo- letimezgon: 2- My-Mother ecunded me,and *v'vhil he pulled-me- away with-one*Hzncand he rovezto- keep illin-hi'
gzzmr, I threw dawn one- o the Stools thatmy Feet were upon-s IIIJLMOOJ' OXYZSK
->f
-
[- 33]- that the Noie would alarm the wedding
Gnes, who were underneath, and o carried-me away into her Bed-Chamber: There,
immediately, having kied me tenderly, hebegan to queion me, how it was with me?
Bidding me tell her all the Particulars, without Shame; for now he was more my*Companion, than any Thing ele. I obey'd ;
and, as I made the Decription, her Eyesparkled ; her Veins welled; and, embra.
lin me, he almo ell away in my Arms,wis: the Sene of my Pleaures; and no
Wonder, for he i: not yet above nine andtwenty Years old. My deare Octa-via,-a.id he, thou art now born to a new Life ; -and this Night will make an End ofhew
ing you that which the Light ofa thouand\ -Days would znever do without thy degt
Pi*lander: Thy Wit and Underandingwill clear up with thy Enjoyments, for that -very Engine that opens our Bodies, will dothe ame to our Mind: ; and make us de
pie all childih sports and Amuements, tpFive our Heart: up to this oneheavenlyPlea
ure, the greate of all mortal Deligbts.Having aid this, he bid me hew her mySmock ; which when he aw, all wet, andgalmo i, with Pbilandcr-'s Liquon- Oh!
What a happy _Girl are you !- Said heyandwhat aFountain of Jpy has this Hull-midOf thine in Store for thee! Pluck o this
Sniqck, which l will Lkeep for a Relick,me is is nzzqoduvita thy Virgins glass.
e
-
- he 1weive raeds-zhkigf saaazeziedzz
'l*' Rctt" * "IEHrPZLZW-iff"khi jgdbr
- ikvz mvf -Z-w.*>?:-
-
T as 1* et' zthem upop taxzds (by the Bed-Side: o
zait-ziv*as? Li ti*ts' poxf-dblyziwithin-myCl*lkths' 'z ' gheltikihgzhb 'ihyzgii-rms; be
begat?* Yoiivchg'
-
[36]**was wet all over : Part af it coming back- ogain, his P-ck fell uzion tlus, and he took
It out hallanguihing, wet and frothy. Ihave done, my Angel! Said he ; let us reft 'a little in each others Arms
TUL. Ah! Dear Coum, had you no'Ple ure this Time ?
OCT. You hall heara pleaant Thing:No ooner was he ome, but I began to be' tickled with a certain Itching in thoe Part',
that I catch"d a hold o him in my Arms,and, with sighs and' Kies, demanded, as itwere, that he hould help me : He couldnot do it with the roper Inrument, it wasnot then in a Con itfon to obey his Deres,
therefore, putting his Finger into my C-t, Vand irrin gently up and down, towardsthe upper art of it, he made me pend o
pleaantly, uch a Wantity of the deliciousNectar, that it ew about his Hand, and allwetted him. I beg thy Pardon, my lovelyOctarvia, for not expecting thy Pleaure z
for Nature in us Men, is omething o eager,that we cannot withand its r lmpetou
ties. I was ruck with a mighty Conu- -ion at my own Lu, and bluhing, and hiding my Face, I aid, that i he elt any
Moiure, -it was that which he had put mto- me,- and not any that I had end out.
Deny it not, my Love, aid he, for I adorethee o -much the more, being able to give
me uch innite Pleaure as 1 ee thou wilt.Mot Women are in that Error, that dtuhe
\
-
[*37]"- think' they ought to* hide our joys rom1us,*
but' it* is the greate Miake in the World,for our Pleaures con more in theirs,than our own. Thee Delights in Men of
Wit and Underanding, pleae not onlythe Body, but charm the Mindgand o ourwhole Enjoyment is *made up of beinggleasd in pleang, and none but Brutes can
e deli hted only with that unuual Evacua.tion o? eang themelves: But to ee aj
delicate Creature, whoe Modey ruggles'with her 'very Senes, be *forced, in our
Arms, to give up all her Reerve, and toabandon erel to the Joy we give her, is,at the 'ame Time, paying back to us, a more
innite Pleaure, who cannot but imagine,that we' are innitely lov'd by a Thing,
which eems pleaed without Meaure by us.After this, we lay ill in one-another's
Arms, he ever and anon, mingling his amorous Kies, with ome Expreions and dying-
Looks, till within a. little while, he oundthis Member i for another Engagement.
Now, aid he, my Dear, you mu be coinplaiant, and pnt yourelf intirely into my
Management. Hare not I already done thatuciently, aidl? No, aid he! you mu
learn another Leon, you have not yet try'd.Then throwing o the Sheet, and turning
up my Smock, above my Breas, up to myvery Chin,* he put his P-'-ck into my' Let
hand, dering me to hold it fa, and convey it to its beloved Place. I did, and it
D - entered
-
BP-F-lWLZVTSF-lxil - - F F-Wi! t NQ a aid-A s I-' zldhaigilzeliie xizlrhs-rhlun'xxzslxse.W- ishl dmlcil;" the) by halaihpzen
rong 'Hrug lzroke *it up to-tl15-v_ .Stones, which pained me o much,gave oyer- keeping- Account, cryi , ogt, 1,
313.: pht in two. Now, aid-tP lender,-- 9i-1- ar: aWoman, and that ll Thingled &Mal'dc*xxheamis- gone to- Intents-Rurpoes. ct Now che Field of- lllighe
TZO' 'erred untotheeor ever. Take it- out, 'L ithnrts mecruelly z rather, aidhe,
I would thitiitarther in; and- o lyingcloe- upon me, he *e2m*d,-if he could, tq
thrut hisy-whole- Body into. e, Ou-x'kpl;lage) were- o joined, that the air oboth
out ecret Pam lay cloeto eachother; Hebegan-then to thru again, and atten- about -l-Talfa; score. he ty'd, he was going to
T -*- d, ' I, who was ju as near it,ycatchedaltho wahing about Middle, and raiins mislevaxds' hkh fellawayirz Joysjof-is he. e Prs'jdJ--is',?hy'-n1n m my -
- was much- th? p FaantcBout Iliad He- remained wipon me a. _
th
Arms .'
while, after our Pleaures wereover,deli*ghtin*g-hlznel to view me. in that- Po-zture, and ee,ais- heaid, o great Raptttres
of joy, -Ater this, we lay ill, and fell- into Difconreoa great many pa Things
of our Love andothgr I, whohad obervedliiixyto be a great udge ofBWW- Him- excellent Cti \-' in the
' - Chfm
\
il
-
[39] *Chzxirm' which make a Woman lovely, hada great Mind to make him decribe unto
me, how a-Woman mu be, to arrive tothat Perection of Beauty ; and o] dered-him to make me apDecription of an exact,
one, uch as none eonld wih more exact;hoping, I mu confes, t*o nd myelf a
great Part, if not all, that hould makeuch an excellent Compoure. - -
V TUL. llove thy Curioty. Mo Women love to hear of no othen Bodj/'s Beau
P' but their own; and very few, 'abatingome 'Charms of a Faoe,-know where there that pleaes lies. j I long to hear what
Decription he made!OcT. - He told me, at r, my Requetwas '*manwerablez for ome Men loved'the Fair, others' Brown, many Black, and
not a few the red-'haifd Women, tho'generally not o eeemed as formerly; o
that to x a Decription, would he a hardThing. Ah, but, aid I, there are in allthee, a Contexture of Parts, and Proportion
oShapes and Limbs, that make thembeautiful -in their Kind.
In my Opinion- aid he, a Woman thatwould pretend to Perection, ought to beof a middle Size, neither of the talle orthe lea ; her Skin ought to be white andmooth, without any Speckles or Roughnes ? her Fleh rm, neither too fat or tpo
lean, but b as to have but few Bones eenany where about her ; her Breas little, and;
D 7- Pll
-
[=-zo;prettily partedonr-'rom another, but anding rm and round ; her Belly- mooth,* and -a little anding out, not flat and falling in 5her Arms turned, as if they were of Ivory ;her Hands long anddapled; with-HolesIt the joints; her Thighs plump, white,
and leening by Degrees ;- her Knees roundlittle and mooth; her Legs raight, withthe Cal of it ring gently, and not of a -udden, intoa thick Bulk; the Small oherLeg little, and wrought, as-it were, lenderto the Proportion of her Foot, which oughtto be white, plump and litle ; her Buttocksought to be round, rm and white; and,
la of all, her C t, with plump Lip; orward, and haded above with Hair: but free'from it below, and on the sides. It zwas -
with great Pleaure, I mu confes, that Iheard this Decription; 'or,'as he wenton,I till viewing- myelf, and making Reections upon every Part, ound that I had
mo, if not all theePn-ections mentioned; but ill not thin-king this euough, andbeing derous to ee the Bottom- of his"houghte, afked him, Whether or no, itmight 'not be poible, that a Woman, with
all that Beauty, might ill be very diagreeable,or ome other Reaon P He aid, yes-:For, if with all thee Perections, he had
not white Teeth, a weet Breath, and no illimells about her, he would be ar from'- an agreeable Creature; but, above all, her
Carriagewould be that which would moW 3 ' enchant
m'
=
-
[41]
z-- _
enchant a Man. I dered him, ince wewere upon that Subject, 'and that in Partof- Agreeablenei, it might lie in my Power, to add' omething to that little Nature
had fhvoured me with, and that I reolvedtomak*e him the only Object- ofmy' Deues, -and place my Felicityin pleang him, thathe would infruct me which Way to do it.Thou art, aid he, my deare Octtwt*a, oweet' natufd, and of thyelf o inclin'd to
all that is ge -noglve thee any' Caution about thy Behavloue; but nce have begun thy Picture*
(r I believe thou wilt anwer all thqstrokes of it- l will, for thy sake, give it*the la* Hni ing, by decribing what Hu
mour I would have ripen-fect beauty be of.- A cheat-ful lleh*aviour, without Gid*dineeor Frolick, *h the mo laing- Pleaure;Pleaant Thought: limited by mode Ex- '*preions, that make one think more than'
they' declare, are the mo acoeptaConveration; but, Above all' Th' ,' hemu' avoid injuries Reections, an jealous Repinings at' other Womens Beauty
and Conduct. I need not recommend Read?ing, without which a Woman is abolutely unociable, and can never ca tivate the
Heart, nbramaze the Mind o aMan o*Sene : Lying is to be avoided, as the Rockupon which' all the reft' of her' good*Walities will micarry nce it' will'= certainly
Wed' theEeerno her Lever; andbylitD 3 lit-
- . - ; ee-t- -ye' __ _- v-TY- M -.3_ -_ "f- '
' T -,-tl,_ ' ">.>**__ V- __'--4'*'k