Priapeia
Priaepia
by divers poets in English verse and prose. Translated by Sir Richard Burton and Leonard C. Smithers
- Lalage offers and she prays thee try
- To ply the painted figures' every part.
- All the conditions (they say) Priapus made with the youngling
- Written in verses twain mortals hereunder can read:
- 'Whatso my garden contains to thee shall be lawfullest plunder
- If unto us thou give whatso thy garden contains.'
- Though I be wooden Priapus (as thou see'st),
- With wooden sickle and a prickle of wood,
- Yet will I seize thee, girl! and hold thee seized
- And This, however gross, withouten fraud
- Stiffer than lyre-string or than twisted rope
- I'll thrust and bury to thy seventh rib.
- Oft in my speech one letter is lost; for Predicate always
- Pedicate I pronounce. Reason--a trip of the tongue!
- Matrons avoid this site, for your chaste breed