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I had it now, I felt it now, and, beginning to drive, he soon gave
nature such a powerful summons down to her favourite quarters, that she
could no longer refuse repairing thither; all my animal spirits then rush'd
mechanically to that center of attraction, and presently, inly warmed,
and stirr'd as I was beyond bearing, I lost all restraint, and yielding
to the force of the emotion, gave down, as mere woman, those effusions
of pleasure, which, in the strictness of still faithful love, I could have
wished to have held up.
Yet oh! what an immense difference did I feel between this impression
of a pleasure merely animal, and struck out of the collision of the sexes
by a passive bodily effect, from that sweet fury, that rage of active delight
which crowns the enjoyments of a mutual love-passion, where two hearts,
tenderly and truly united, club to exalt the joy, and give it a spirit
and soul that bids defiance to that end which mere momentary desires generally
terminate in, when they die of a surfeit of satisfaction!
Mr. H . . ., whom no distinctions of that sort seemed to disturb, scarce
gave himself or me breathing time from the last encounter, but, as if he
had task'd himself to prove that the appearances of his vigour were not
signs hung out in vain, in a few minutes he was in a condition for renewing
the onset; to which, preluding with a storm of kisses, he drove the same
course as before, with unabated fervour; and thus, in repeated engagements,
kept me constantly in exercise till dawn of morning; in all which time
he made me fully sensible of the virtues of his firm texture of limbs,
his square shoulders, broad chest, compact hard muscles, in short a system
of namliness that might pass for no bad image of our ancient sturdy barons,
when they wielded the battle-ax: whose race is now so thoroughly refin'd
and frittered away into the more delicate and modern-built frame of our
pap-nerv'd softlings, who are as pale, as pretty, and almost as masculine
as their sisters.
Mr. H . . ., content, however, with having the day break upon his triumphs,
delivered me up to the refreshment of a rest we both wanted, and we soon
dropped into a profound sleep.
Tho' he was some time awake before me, yet did he not offer to disturb
a repose he had given me so much occasion for; but on my first stirring,
which was not till past ten o'clock, I was oblig'd to endure one more trial
of his manhood.
About eleven, in came Mrs. Jones, with two basins of the richest soup,
which her experience in these matters had mov'd her to prepare. I pass
over the fulsome compliments, the cant of the decent procuress, with which
she saluted us both; but tho' my blood rose at the sight of her, I supprest
my emotions, and gave all my concern to reflections on what would be the
consequence of this new engagement.
But Mr. H . . ., who penetrated my uneasiness, did not long suffer
me to languish under it. He acquainted me that, having taken a solid sincere
affection to me, he would begin by giving me one leading mark of it by
removing me out of a house which must, for many reasons, be irksome and
disagreeable to me, into convenient lodgings, where he would take all imaginable
care of me; and desiring me not to have any explanations with my landlady,
or be impatient till he returned, he dress'd and went out, having left
me a purse with two and twenty guineas in it, being all he had about him,
as he expresst it, to keep my pocket till further supplies.
As soon as he was gone, I felt the usual consequence of the first launch
into vice (for my love-attachment to Charles never appear'd to me in that
light). I was instantly borne away down the stream, without making back
to the shore. My dreadful necessities, my gratitude, and above all, to
say the plain truth, the dissipation and diversion I began to find, in
this new acquaintance, from the black corroding thoughts my heart had been
a prey to ever since the absence of my dear Charles, concurr'd to stun
all contrary reflections. If I now thought of my first, my only charmer,
it was still with the tenderness and regret of the fondest love, embitter'd
with the consciousness that I was no longer worthy of him. I could have
begg'd my bread with him all over the world, but wretch that I was, I had
neither the virtue nor courage requisite not to outlive my separation from
him!
Yet, had not my heart been thus pre-ingaged, Mr. H . . . might probably
have been the sole master of it; but the place was full, and the force
of conjunctures alone had made him the possessor of my person; the charms
of which had, by the bye, been his sole object and passion, and were, of
course, no foundation for a love either very delicate or very durable.
He did not return till six in the evening to take me away to my new
lodgings; and my moveables being soon pack'd, and convey'd into a hackney-coach,
it cost me but little regret to take my leave of a landlady whom I thought
I had so much reason not to be overpleas'd with; and as for her part, she
made no other difference to my staying or going, but what that of the profit
created.
We soon got to the house appointed for me, which was that of a plain
tradesman who, on the score of interest, was entirely at Mr. H . . .'s
devotion, and who let him the first floor, very genteelly furnish'd, for
two guineas a week, of which I was instated mistress, with a maid to attend
me.
He stayed with me that evening, and we had a supper from a neighbouring
tavern, after which, and a gay glass or two, the maid put me to bed. Mr.
H . . . soon follow'd, and notwithstanding the fatigues of the preceding
night, I found no quarter nor remission from him: he piqued himself, as
he told me, on doing the honours of my new apartment.
The morning being pretty well advanc'd, we got to breakfast; and the
ice now broke, my heart, no longer engross'd by love, began to take ease,
and to please itself with such trifles as Mr. H . . .'s liberal liking
led him to make his court to the usual vanity of our sex. Silks, laces,
ear-rings, pearl-necklace, gold watch, in short, all the trinkets and articles
of dress were lavishly heap'd upon me; the sense of which, if it did not
create returns of love, forc'd a kind of grateful fondness something like
love; a distinction it would be spoiling the pleasure of nine tenths of
the keepers in the town to make, and is, I suppose, the very good reason
why so few of them ever do make it.
I was now establish'd the kept mistress in form, well lodg'd, with
a very sufficient allowance, and lighted up with all the lustre of dress.
Mr. H . . . continu'd kind and tender to me; yet, with all this, I
was far from happy; for, besides my regret for my dear youth, which, though
often suspended or diverted, still return'd upon me in certain melancholic,
moments with redoubled violences, I wanted more society, more dissipation.
As to Mr. H . . ., he was so much my superior in every sense, that
I felt it too much to the disadvantage of the gratitude I ow'd him. Thus
he gain'd my esteem, though he could not raise my taste; I was qualify'd
for no sort of conversation with him except one sort, and that is a satisfaction
which leaves tiresome intervals, if not fill'd up by love, or other amusements.
Mr. H . . ., so experienc'd, so learned in the ways of women, numbers
of whom had passed through his hands, doubtless soon perceiv'd this uneasiness,
and without approving or liking me the better for it, had the complaisance
to indulge me. He made suppers at my lodgings, where he brought several
companions of his pleasures, with their mistresses; and by this means I
got into a circle of acquaintance that soo strip'd me of all the remains
of bashfulness and modesty which might be yet left of my country education,
and were, to a just taste, perhaps the greatest of my charms.
We visited one another in form, and mimic'd, as near as we could, all
the miseries, the follies, and impertinences of the women of quality, in
the round of which they trifle away their time, without its ever entering
into their little heads that on earth there cannot subsist any thing more
silly, more flat, more insipid and worthless, than, generally consider'd,
their system of life is: they ought to treat the men as their tyrants,
indeed! were they to condemn them to it.
But tho', amongst the kept mistresses (and I was now acquainted with
a good many, besides some useful matrons, who live by their connexions
with them), I hardly knew one that did not perfectly detest her keeper,
and, of course, made little or no scruple of any infidelity she could safely
accomplish, I had still no notion of wronging mine; for, besides that no
mark of jealousy on his side induced in me the desire or gave me the provocation
to play him a trick of that sort, and that his constant generosity, politeness,
and tender attentions to please me forc'd a regard to him, that without
affecting my heart, insur'd him my fidelity, no object had yet presented
that could overcome the habitual liking I had contracted for him; and I
was on the eve of obtaining, from the movements of his own voluntary generosity,
a modest provision for life, when an accident happen'd which broke all
the measures he had resolv'd upon in my favor.
I had now liv'd near seven months with Mr. H . . ., when one day returning
to my lodgings from a visit in the neighbourhood, where I us'd to stay
longer, I found the street door open, and the maid of the house standing
at it, talking with some of her acquaintances, so that I came in without
knocking; and, as I passed by, she told me Mr. H . . . was above. I stept
up-stairs into my own bed-chamber, with no other thought than of pulling
off my hat, etc., and then to wait upon him in the dining room, into which
my bed-chamber had a door, as is common enough. Whilst I was untying my
hat-strings, I fancied I heard my maid Hannah's voice and a sort of tussle,
which raising my curiosity, I stole softly to the door, where a knot in
the wood had been slipt out and afforded a very commanding peep-hole to
the scene then in agitation, the actors of which had been too earnestly
employ'd to hear my opening my own door, from the landing-place of the
stairs, into my bed-chamber.
The first sight that struck me was Mr. H . . . pulling and hauling
this coarse country strammel towards a couch that stood in a corner of
the dining room; to which the girl made only a sort of awkward boidening
resistance, crying out so loud, that I, who listened at the door, could
scarce hear her: "Pray sir, don't . . . , let me alone . . . I am
not for your turn . . . You cannot, sure, demean yourself with such a poor
body as I . . . Lord! Sir, my mistress may come home . . . I must not indeed
. . . I will cry out . . ." All of which did not hinder her from insensibly
suffering herself to be brought to the foot of the couch, upon which a
push of no mighty violence serv'd to give her a very easy fall, and my
gentleman having got up his hands to the strong-hold of her VIRTUE, she,
no doubt, thought it was time to give up the argument, and that all further
defense would be in vain: and he, throwing her petticoats over her face,
which was now as red as scarlet, discover'd a pair of stout, plump, substantial
thighs, and tolerably white; he mounted them round his hips, and coming
out with his drawn weapon, stuck it in the cloven spot, where he seem'd
to find a less difficult entrance than perhaps he had flatter'd himself
with (for, by the way, this blouze had left her place in the country, for
a bastard), and, indeed, all his motions shew'd he was lodg'd pretty much
at large. After he had done, his DEAREE gets up, drops her petticoats down,
and smooths her apron and handkerchief. Mr. H . . . look'd a little silly,
and taking out some money, gave it her, with an air indifferent enough,
bidding her be a good girl, and say nothing.
Had I lov'd this man, it was not in nature for me to have had patience
to see the whole scene through: I should have broke in and play'd the jealous
princess with a vengeance. But that was not the case, my pride alone was
hurt, my heart not, and I could easier win upon myself to see how far he
would go, till I had no uncertainty upon my conscience.
The least delicate of all affairs of this sort being now over, I retir'd
softly into my closet, where I began to consider what I should do. My first
scheme, naturally, was to rush in and upbraid them; this, indeed, flatter'd
my present emotions and vexations, as it would have given immediate vent
to them; but, on second thoughts, not being so clear as to the consequences
to be apprehended from such a step, I began to doubt whether it was not
better to dissemble my discovery till a safer season, when Mr. H . . .
should have perfected the settlement he had made overtures to me of, and
which I was not to think such a violent explanation, as I was indeed not
equal to the management of, could possibly forward, and might destroy.
On the other hand, the provocation seem'd too gross, too flagrant, not
to give me some thoughts of revenge; the very start of which idea restor'd
me to perfect composure; and delighted as I was with the confus'd plan
of it in my head, I was easily mistress enough of myself to support the
part of ignorance I had prescrib'd to myself; and as all this circle of
reflections was instantly over, I stole a tip-toe to the passage door,
and opening it with a noise, pass'd for having that moment come home; and
after a short pause, as if to pull off my things, I opened the door into
the dining room, where I found the dowdy blowing the fire, and my faithful
shepherd walking about the room and whistling, as cool and unconcern'd
as if nothing had happened. I think, however, he had not much to brag of
having out-dissembled me: for I kept up, nobly, the character of our sex
for art, and went up to him with the same air of frankness as I had ever
receiv'd him. He stayed but a little while, made some excuse for not being
able to stay the evening with me, and went out.
As for the wench, she was now spoil'd, at least for my servant; and
scarce eight and forty hours were gone round, before her insolence, on
what had pass'd between Mr. H . . . and her, gave me so fair an occasion
to turn her away, at a minute's warning, that not to have done it would
have been the wonder: so that he could neither disapprove it nor find in
it the least reason to suspect my original motive. What became of her afterwards,
I know not; but generous as Mr. H . . . was, he undoubtedly made her amends:
though, I dare answer, that he kept up no farther commerce with her of
that sort; as his stooping to such a coarse morsel was only a sudden sally
of lust, on seeing a wholesome-looking, buxom country-wench, and no more
strange than hunger, or even a whimsical appetite's making a fling meal
of neck-beef, for change of diet.
Had I consider'd this escapade of Mr. H . . . in no more than that
light and contented myself with turning away the wench, I had thought and
acted right; but, flush'd as I was with imaginary wrongs, I should have
held Mr. H . . . to have been cheaply off, if I had not push'd my revenge
farther, and repaid him, as exactly as I could for the soul of me, in the
same coin.
Nor was this worthy act of justice long delay'd: I had it too much
at heart. Mr. H . . . had, about a fortnight before, taken into his service
a tenant's son, just come out of the country, a very handsome young lad
scarce turn'd of nineteen, fresh as a rose, well shap'd and clever limb'd:
in short, a very good excuse for any woman's liking, even tho' revenge
had been out of the question; any woman, I say, who was disprejudic'd,
and had wit and spirit enough to prefer a point of pleasure to a point of pride.
Mr. H . . . had clap'd a livery upon him; and his chief employ was,
after being shewn my lodgings, to bring and carry letters or messages between
his master and me; and as the situation of all kept ladies is not the fittest
to inspire respect, even to the meanest of mankind, and, perhaps, less
of it from the most ignorant, I could not help observing that this lad,
who was, I suppose, acquainted with my relation to his master by his fellow-servants,
used to eye me in that bashful confus'd way, more expressive, more moving
and readier catch'd at by our sex, than any other declarations whatever:
my figure had, it seems, struck him, and modest and innocent as he was,
he did not himself know that the pleasure he took in looking at me was
love, or desire; but his eyes, naturally wanton, and now enflam'd with
passion, spoke a great deal more than he durst have imagin'd they did.
Hitherto, indeed, I had only taken notice of the comeliness of the youth,
but without the least design: my pride alone would have guarded me from
a thought that way, had not Mr. H . . .'s condescension with my maid, where
there was not half the temptation in point of person, set me a dangerous
example; but now I began to look on this stripling as every way a delicious
instrument of my design'd retaliation upon Mr. H . . . of an obligation
for which I should have made a conscience to die in his debt.
In order then to pave the way for the accomplishment of my scheme,
for two or three times that the young fellow came to me with messages,
I manag'd so, as without affectation to have him admitted to my bed-side,
or brought to me at my toilet, where I was dressing; and by carelessly
shewing or letting him see, as if without meaning or design, sometimes
my bosom rather more bare than it should be; sometimes my hair, of which
I had a very fine head, in the natural flow of it while combing; sometimes
a neat leg, that had unfortunately slipt its garter, which I made no scruple
of tying before him, easily gave him the impressions favourable to my purpose,
which I could perceive to sparkle in his eyes, and glow in his cheeks:
then certain slight squeezes by the hand, as I took letters from him, did
his business compleatly.
When I saw him thus mov'd, and fired for my purpose, I inflam'd him
yet more, by asking him several leading questions, such as had he a mistress?
. . . was she prettier than me? . . . could he love such a one as I was?
. . . and the like; to all which the blushing simpleton answer'd to my
wish, in a strain of perfect nature, perfect undebauch'd innocence, but
with all the awkwardness and simplicity of countrybreeding.
When I thought I had sufficiently ripen'd him for the laudable point
I had in view, one day that I expected him at a particular hour, I took
care to have the coast clear for the reception I design'd him; and, as
I laid it, he came to the dining-room door, tapped at it, and, on my bidding
him come in, he did so, and shut the door after him. I desir'd him, then,
to bolt it on the inside, pretending it would not otherwise keep shut.
I was then lying at length upon that very couch, the scene of Mr. H
. . .'s polite joys, in an undress which was with all the art of negligence
flowing loose, and in a most tempting disorder: no stay, no hoop . . .
no incumbrance whatever. On the other hand, he stood at a little distance,
that gave me a full view of a fine featur'd, shapely, healthy country lad,
breathing the sweets of fresh blooming youth; his hair, which was of a
perfect shining black, play'd to his face in natural side-curls, and was
set out with a smart tuck-up behind; new buckskin breeches, that, clipping
close, shew'd the shape of a plump, well made thigh; white stockings, garter-lac'd
livery, shoulder knot, altogether compos'd a figure in which the beauties
of pure flesh and blood appeared under no disgrace form the lowness of
a dress, to which a certain spruce neatness seems peculiarly fitted.
I bid him come towards me and give me his letter, at the same time
throwing down, carelessly, a book I had in my hands. He colour'd, and came
within reach of delivering me the letter, which he held out, awkwardly
enough, for me to take, with his eyes riveted on my bosom, which was, through
the design'd disorder of my handkerchief, sufficiently bare, and rather
shaded than hid.
I, smiling in his face, took the letter, and immediately catching gently
hold of his shirt sleeve, drew him towards me, blushing, and almost trembling;
for surely his extreme bashfulness, and utter inexperience, call'd for,
at least, all the advances to encourage him: his body was now conveniently
inclin'd towards me, and just softly chucking his smooth beardless chin,
I asked him if he was afraid of a lady? . . ., and, with that took, and carrying his hand to my breasts, I prest it tenderly to them. They were
now finely furnish'd, and rais'd in flesh, so that, panting with desire,
they rose and fell, in quick heaves, under his touch: at this, the boy's
eyes began to lighten with all the fires of inflam'd nature, and his cheeks
flush'd with a deep scarlet: tongue-tied with joy, rapture, and bashfulness,
he could not speak, but then his looks, his emotion, sufficiently satisfy'd
me that my train had taken, and that I had no disappointment to fear.
My lips, which I threw in his way, so as that he could not escape kissing
them, fix'd, fired, and embolden'd him: and now, glancing my eyes towards
that part of his dress which cover'd the essential object of enjoyment,
I plainly discover'd the swell and commotion there; and as I was now too
far advanc'd to stop in so fair a way, and was indeed no longer able to
contain myself, or wait the slower progress of his maiden bashfulness (for
such it seem'd, and really was), I stole my hand upon his thighs, down
one of which I could both see and feel a stiff hard body, confin'd by his
breeches, that my fingers could discover no end to. Curious then, and eager
to unfold so alarming a mystery, playing, as it were, with his buttons,
which were bursting ripe from the active force within, those of his waistband
and fore-flap flew open at a touch, when out IT started; and now, disengag'd
from the shirt, I saw, with wonder and surprise, what? not the play-thing
of a boy, not the weapon of a man, but a maypole of so enormous a standard,
that had proportions been observ'd, it must have belong'd to a young giant.
Its prodigious size made me shrink again; yet I could not, without pleasure, behold, and even ventur'd to feel, such a length, such a breadth of animated
ivory! perfectly well turn'd and fashion'd, the proud stiffness of which
distended its skin, whose smooth polish and velvet softness might vie with
that of the most delicate of our sex, and whose exquisite whiteness was
not a little set off by a sprout of black curling hair round the root,
through the jetty sprigs of which the fair skin shew'd as in a fine evening
you may have remark'd the clear light ether throught the branchwork of
distant trees over-topping the summit of a hill: then the broad and blueish-casted
incarnate of the head, and blue serpentines of its veins, altogether compos'd
the most striking assemblage of figure and colours in nature. In short,
it stood an object of terror and delight.
But what was yet more surprising, the owner of this natural curiosity,
through the want of occasions in the strictness of his home-breeding, and
the little time he had been in town not having afforded him one, was hitherto
an absolute stranger, in practice at least, to the use of all that manhood
he was so nobly stock'd with; and it now fell to my lot ot stand his first
trial of it, if I could resolve to run the risks of its disproportion to
that tender part of me, which such an oversiz'd machine was very fit to
lay in ruins.
But it was now of the latest to deliberate; for, by this time, the
young fellow, overheated with the present objects, and too high mettled
to be longer curb'd in by that modesty and awe which had hitherto restrain'd
him, ventur'd, under the stronger impulse and instructive promptership
of nature alone, to slip his hands, trembling with eager impetuous desires,
under my petticoats; and seeing, I suppose, nothing extremely severe in
my looks to stop or dash him, he feels out, and seizes, gently, the center-spot
of his ardours. Oh then! the fiery touch of his fingers determines me,
and my fears melting away before the glowing intolerable heat, my thighs
disclose of themselves, and yield all liberty to his hand: and now, a favourable
movement giving my petticoats a toss, the avenue lay too fair, too open
to be miss'd. He is now upon me: I had placed myself with a jet under him,
as commodious and open as possible to his attempts, which were untoward
enough, for his machine, meeting with no inlet, bore and batter'd stiffly
against me in random pushes, now above, now below, now beside his point;
till, burning with impatience from its irritating touches, I guided gently,
with my hand, this furious engine to where my young novice was now to be
taught his first lesson of pleasure. Thus he nick'd, at length, the warm
and insufficient orifice; but he was made to find no breach impracticable,
and mine, tho' so often enter'd, was still far from wide enough to take
him easily in. By my direction, however, the head of his unwieldy machine
was so critically pointed that, feeling him foreright against the tender
opening, a favourable motion from me met his timely thrust, by which the
lips of it, strenuously dilated, gave way to his thus assisted impetuosity,
so that we might both feel that he had gain'd a lodgement. Pursuing then
his point, he soon, by violent, and, to me, most painful piercing thrusts,
wedges himself at length so far in, as to be now tolerably secure of his
entrance: here he stuck, and I now felt such a mixture of pleasure and
pain, as there is no giving a definition of. I dreaded alike his splitting
me farther up, or his withdrawing; I could not bear either to keep or part
with him. The sense of pain however prevailing, from his prodigious size
and stiffness, acting upon me in those continued rapid thrusts, with which
he furiously pursu'd his penetration, made me cry out gently: "Oh!
my dear, you hurt me!" This was enough to check the tender respectful
boy even in his midcareer; and he immediately drew out the sweet cause
of my complaint, whilst his eyes eloquently express'd, at once, his grief
for hurting me, and his reluctance at dislodging from quarters of which
the warmth and closeness had given him a gust of pleasure that he was now
desire-mad to satisfy, and yet too much a novice not to be afraid of my
withholding his relief, on account ot the pain he had put me to.
But I was, myself, far from being pleas'd with his having too much
regarded my tender exclaims; for now, more and more fired with the object
before me, as it still stood with the fiercest erection, unbonnetted, and
displaying its broad bermilion head, I first gave the youth a re-encouraging
kiss, which he repaid me with a fervour that seem'd at once to thank me,
and bribe my farther compliance; and soon replac'd myself in a posture
to receive, at all risks, the renew'd invasion, which he did not delay
an instant: for, being presently remounted, I once more felt the smooth
hard gristle forcing an entrance, which he achiev'd rather easier than
before. Pain'd, however, as I was, with his efforts of gaining a complete
admission, which he was so regardful as to manage by gentle degrees, I
took care not to complain. In the meantime, the soft strait passage gradually
loosens, yields, and, stretch'd to its utmost bearing, by the stiff, thick,
indriven engine, sensible, at once, to the ravishing pleasure of the feel
and the pain of the distension, let him in about half way, when all the
most nervous activity he now exerted, to further his penetration, gain'd
him not an inch of his purpose: for, whilst he hesitated there, the crisis
of pleasure overtook him, and the close compressure of the warm surrounding
fold drew from him the extatic gush, even before mine was ready to meet
it, kept up by the pain I had endur'd in the course ot the engagement,
from the insufferable size of his weapon, tho' it was not as yet in above
half its length.
I expected then, but without wishing it, that he would draw, but was
pleasantly disappointed: for he was not to be let off so. The well breath'd
youth, hot-mettled, and flush with genial juices, was now fairly in for
making me know my driver. As soon, then, as he had made a short pause,
waking, as it were, out of the trance of pleasure (in which every sense
seem'd lost for a while, whilst, with his eyes shut, and short quick breathing,
he had yielded down his maiden tribute), he still kept his post, yet unsated
with enjoyment, and solacing in these so new delights; till his stiffness,
which had scarce perceptibly remitted, being thoroughly recovered to him,
who had not once unsheath'd, he proceeded afresh to cleave and open to
himself an entire entry into me, which was not a little made easy to him
by the balsamic injection with which he had just plentifully moisten'd
the whole internals of the passage. Redoubling, then, the active energy
of his thrusts, favoured by the fervid appetite of my motions, the soft
oiled wards can no longer stand so effectual a picklock, but yield, and
open him an entrance. And now, with conspiring nature, and my industry,
strong to aid him, he pierces, penetrates, and at length, winning his way
inch by inch, gets entirely in, and finally mighty thrust sheaths it up
to the guard; on the information of which, from the close jointure of our
bodies (insomuch that the hair on both sides perfectly interweav'd and
incircl'd together), the eyes of the transported youth sparkl'd with more
joyous fires, and all his looks and motions acknowledged excess of pleasure,
which I now began to share, for I felt him in my very vitals! I was quite
sick with delight! stir'd beyond bearing with its furious agitations within
me, and gorged and cramm'd, even to surfeit. Thus I lay gasping, panting
under him, till his broken breathings, faltering accents, eyes twinkling
with humid fires, lunges more furious, and an increased stiffness, gave
me to hail the approaches of the second period: it came . . . and the sweet youth, overpower'd with the extasy, died away in my arms, melting in a
flood that shot in genial warmth into the innermost recesses of my body;
every conduit of which, dedicated to that pleasure, was on flow to mix
with it. Thus we continued for some instants, lost, breathless, senseless
of every thing, and in every part but those favourite ones of nature, in
which all that we enjoyed of life and sensation was now totally concentre'd.
When our mutual trance was a little over, and the young fellow had
withdrawn that delicious stretcher, with which he had most plentifully
drowned all thoughts of revenge in the sense of actual pleasure, the widen'd
wounded passage refunded a stream of pearly liquids, which flowed down
my thighs, mixed with streaks of blood, the marks of the ravage of that
montrous machine of his, which had now triumph'd over a kind of second
maidenhead. I stole, however, my handkerchief to those parts, and wip'd
them as dry as I could, whilst he was re-adjusting and buttoning up.
I made him now sit down by me, and as he had gather'd courage from
such extreme intimacy, he gave me an aftercourse of pleasure, in a natural
burst of tender gratitude and joy, at the new scenes of bliss I had opened
to him: scenes positively new, as he had never before had the least acquaintance
with that mysterious mark, the cloven stamp of female distinction, tho'
nobody better qualify'd than he to penetrate into its deepest recesses,
or do it nobler justice. But when, by certain motions, certain unquietnesses
of his hands, that wandered not without design, I found he languish'd for
satisfying a curiosity, natural enough, to view and handle those parts
which attract and concentre the warmest force of imagination, charmed as
I was to have any occasion of obliging and humouring his young desires,
I suffer'd him to proceed as he pleased, without check or control, to the
satisfaction of them.
Easily, then, reading in my eyes the full permission of myself to all
his wishes, he scarce pleased himself more than me when, having insinuated
his hand under my petticoat and shift, he presently removed those bars
to the sight by slyly lifting them upwards, under favour of a thousand
kisses, which he thought, perhaps, necessary to divert my attention from
what he was about. All my drapery being now roll'd up to my waist, I threw
myself into such a posture upon the couch, as gave up to him, in full view,
the whole region of delight, and all the luxurious landscape round it.
The transported youth devour'd every thing with his eyes, and try'd, with
his fingers, to lay more open to his sight the secrets of that dark and
delicious deep: he opens the folding lips, the softness of which, yielding
entry to any thing of a hard body, close round it, and oppose the sight:
and feeling further, meets with, and wonders at, a soft fleshy excrescence,
which, limber and relaxed after the late enjoyment, now grew, under the
touch and examination of his fiery fingers, more and more stiff and considerable,
till the titillating ardours of that so sensible part made me sigh, as
if he had hurt me; on which he withdrew his curious probing fingers, asking
me pardon, as it were, in a kiss that rather increased the flame there.
Novelty ever makes the strongest impressions, and in pleasures, especially;
no wonder, then, that he was swallowed up in raptures of admiration of
things so interesting by their nature, and now seen and handled for the
first time. On my part, I was richly overpaid for the pleasure I gave him,
in that of examining the power of those objects thus abandon'd to him,
naked and free to his loosest wish, over the artless, natural stripling:
his eyes streaming fire, his cheeks glowing with a florid red, his fervid
frequent sighs, whilst his hands convulsively squeez'd, opened, pressed
together again the lips and sides of that deep flesh wound, or gently twitched
the overgrowing moss; and all proclaimed the excess, the riot of joys,
in having his wantonness thus humour'd. But he did not long abuse my patience,
for the objects before him had now put him by all his, and, coming out
with that formidable machine of his, he lets the fury loose, and pointing
it directly to the pouting-lipt mouth, that bid him sweet defiance in dumb-shew,
squeezes in the head, and, driving with refreshed rage, breaks in, and
plugs up the whole passage of that soft pleasure-conduit, where he makes
all shake again, and put, once more, all within me into such an uproar,
as nothing could still but a fresh inundation from the very engine of those
flames, as well as from all the springs with which nature floats that reservoir
of joy, when risen to its flood-mark.
I was now so bruised, so batter'd, so spent with this over-match, that
I could hardly stir, or raise myself, but lay palpitating, till the ferment
of my sense subsiding by degrees, and the hour striking at which I was
oblig'd to dispatch my young man, I tenderly advised him of the necessity
there was for parting; which I felt as much displeasure at as he could
do, who seemed eagerly disposed to keep the field, and to enter on a fresh
action. But the danger was too great, and after some hearty kisses of leave,
and recommendations of secrecy and discretion, I forc'd myself to send
him away, not without assurances of seeing him again, to the same purpose,
as soon as possible, and thrust a guinea into his hands: not more, lest,
being too flush of money, a suspicion or discovery might arise from thence,
having every thing to fear from the dangerous indiscretion of that age
in which young fellows would be too irresistible, too charming, if we had
not that terrible fault to guard against.
Giddy and intoxicated as I was with such satiating draughts of pleasure,
I still lay on the couch, supinely stretched out, in a delicious languor
diffus'd over all my limbs, hugging myself for being thus revenged to my
heart's content, and that in a manner so precisely alike, and on the identical
spot in which I had received the supposed injury. No reflections on the
consequences ever once perplex'd me, nor did I make myself one single reproach
for having, by this step, completely entered myself of a profession more
decry'd than disused. I should have held it ingratitude to the pleasure
I had received to have repented of it; and since I was now over the bar,
I thought, by plunging over head and ears into the stream I was hurried
away by, to drown all sense of shame or reflection.
Whilst I was thus making these laudable dispositions, and whispering
to myself a kind of tacit vow of incontinency, enters Mr. H . . . The consciousness
of what I had been doing deepen'd yet the glowing of my cheeks, flushed
with the warmth of the late action, which, joined to the piquant air of
my dishabille, drew from Mr. H . . . a compliment on my looks, which he
was proceeding to back the sincerity of with proofs, and that with so brisk
an action as made me tremble for fear of a discovery from the condition
of those parts were left in from their late severe handling: the orifice
dilated and inflamed, the lips swollen with their uncommon distension,
the ringlets press down, crushed and uncurl'd with the over-flowing moisture
that had wet every thing round it; in short, the different feel and state
of things would hardly have passed upon one of Mr. H . . .'s nicety and
experience unaccounted for but by the real cause. But here the woman saved
me: I pretended a violent disorder of my head, and a feverish heat, that
indisposed me too much to receive his embraces. He gave in to this, and
good-naturedly desisted. Soon after, an old lady coming in made a third,
very a-propos for the confusion I was in, and Mr. H . . ., after bidding
me take care of myself, and recommending me to my repose, left me much
at ease and reliev'd by his absence.
In the close of the evening, I took care to have prepar'd for me a
warm bath of aromatick and sweet herbs; in which having fully laved and
solaced myself, I came out voluptuously refresh'd in body and spirit.
The next morning, waking pretty early, after a night's perfect rest
and composure, it was not without some dread and uneasiness that I thought
of what innovation that tender, soft system of mine might have sustained
from the shock of a machine so sized for its destruction.
Struck with this apprehension, I scarce dared to carry my hand thither,
to inform myself of the state and posture of things.
But I was soon agreeably cur'd of my fears.
The silky hair that covered round the borders, now smooth'd and re-pruned,
had resumed its wonted curl and trimness; the fleshy pouting lips that
had stood the brunt of the engagement, were no longer swollen or moisturedrenched;
and neither they, nor the passage into which they opened, that suffered
so great a dilatation, betray'd any the least alteration, outward or inwardly,
to the most curious research, notwithstanding also the laxity that naturally
follows the warm bath.
This continuation of that grateful stricture which is in us, to the
men, the very jet of their pleasure, I ow'd, it seems, to a happy habit
of body, juicy, plump and furnished towards the texture of those parts,
with a fullness of soft springy flesh, that yielding sufficiently, as it
does, to almost any distension soon recovers itself so as to retighten
that strict compression of its mantlings and folds, which form the sides
of the passage, wherewith it so tenderly embraces and closely clips any
foreign body introduc'd into it, such as my exploring finger then was.
Finding then every thing in due tone and order, I remember'd my fears,
only to make a jest of them to myself. and now, palpably mistress of nay
size of man, and triumphing in my double achievement of pleasure and revenge,
I abandon'd myself entirely to the ideas of all the delight I had swam
in. I lay stretching out, glowingly alive all over, and tossing with burning
impatience for the renewal of joys that had sinned but in a sweet excess;
now did I loose my longing, for about ten in the morning, according to
expectation, Will, my new humble sweetheart, came with a message from his
master, Mr. H . . ., to know how I did. I had taken care to send my maid
on an errand into the city, that I was sure would take up time enough;
and, from the people of the house, I had nothing to fear, as they were
plain good sorts of folks, and wise enough to mind no more other people's
business than they could well help.
All dispositions then made, not forgetting that of lying in bed to
receive him, when he was entered the door of my bed-chamber, a latch, that
I governed by a wire, descended and secur'd it.
I could not but observe that my young minion was as much spruced out
as could be expected from one in his condition: a desire of pleasing that
could not be indifferent to me, since it prov'd that I pleased him; which,
I assure you, was now a point I was not above having in view.
His hair trimly dressed, clean linen, and, above all, a hale, ruddy,
wholesome country look, made him out as pretty a piece of woman's meat
as you could see, and I should have thought nay one much out of taste that
could not have made a hearty meal of such a morsel as nature seemed to
have design'd for the highest diet of pleasure.