Two diff’rent shafts he from his quiver draws; One to repel desire, and one to cause. One shaft is pointed with refulgent gold: To bribe the love, and make the lover bold: One blunt, and tipt with lead, whose base allay
allay, alloy, combination of metals
Provokes disdain, and drives desire away. The blunted bolt against the nymph he drest: But with the sharp transfixt Apollo’s breast.
With naked neck she goes, and shoulders bare; And with a fillet binds her flowing hair.
fillet, a ribbon
By many suitors sought, she mocks their pains, And still her vow’d virginity maintains. Impatient of a yoke, the name of bride She shuns, and hates the joys, she never try’d. On wilds, and woods, she fixes her desire: Nor knows what youth, and kindly love, inspire.
she’s not the marrying kind
Her father chides her oft: Thou ow’st, says he,
Thou ow’st, you owe
A husband to thy self, a son to me.
that’s his position
She, like a crime, abhors the nuptial bed:
she’d, categorically, rather hunt
She glows with blushes, and she hangs her head. Then casting round his neck her tender arms, Sooths him with blandishments, and filial charms:
filial, can apply to both son or
daughter
blandishments, sweet nothings
Give me, my Lord, she said, to live, and die, A spotless maid, without the marriage tye.
allow me to live[ ] and die[ ] a spotless
maid, a virgin, she asks, best, that
line, read without commas
girls would’ve been at the mercy
of their fathers’ wishes at the time,
would’ve needed permission not to
marry
‘Tis but a small request; I beg no more Than what Diana’s father gave before.
The good old sire was soften’d to consent; But said her wish wou’d prove her punishment: For so much youth, and so much beauty join’d, Oppos’d the state, which her desires design’d.