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 Female Fashions for 1799 by Mary Darby Robinson 
						A form, as any taper, fine ;A head like half-pint bason ;
 Where golden cords, and bands entwine,
 As rich as fleece of JASON.
 
 A pair of shoulders strong and wide,
 Like country clown enlisting ;
 Bare arms long dangling by the side,
 And shoes of ragged listing !
 
 Cravats like towels, thick and broad,
 Long tippets made of bear-skin,
 Muffs that a RUSSIAN might applaud,
 And rouge to spoil a fair skin.
 
 Long petticoats to hide the feet,
 Silk hose with clocks of scarlet ;
 A load of perfume, sick'ning sweet,
 Bought of PARISIAN VARLET.
 
 A bush of hair, the brow to shade,
 Sometimes the eyes to cover ;
 A necklace that might be display'd
 By OTAHEITEAN lover !
 
 A bowl of straw to deck the head,
 Like porringer unmeaning ;
 A bunch of POPPIES flaming red,
 With motly ribands streaming.
 
 Bare ears on either side the head,
 Like wood-wild savage SATYR ;
 Tinted with deep vermilion red,
 To shame the blush of nature.
 
 Red elbows, gauzy gloves, that add
 An icy cov'ring merely ;
 A wadded coat, the shape to pad,
 Like Dutch-women -- or nearly.
 
 Such is CAPRICE ! but, lovely kind !
 Oh ! let each mental feature
 Proclaim the labour of the mind,
 And leave your charms to NATURE.
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