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Born gentlemen and godly manliness
DOI link for Born gentlemen and godly manliness
Born gentlemen and godly manliness book
Born gentlemen and godly manliness
DOI link for Born gentlemen and godly manliness
Born gentlemen and godly manliness book
ABSTRACT
Prigson – an habitué of Will's coffee house – is one the ‘Beau's’, the ‘finish'd Fops, the Men of Wig and Snuff, / Knights of the Famous Oyster-Barrel Muff’. He is included amongst the many corrupt gentlemen in Defoe's satire Reformation of Manners (1702); a poem satirising those ostensible guardians of the culture of moral reform sweeping London in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. But Prigson is a failure in a particular way: Prigson from Nurse and Hanging-sleeves got free, A little smatch of Modern Blasphemy; A powder'd Wig, a Sword, a Page, a Chair, Learns to take Snuff, drink Chocolate, and swear: Nature seems thus far to ha’ led him on, And no Man thinks he was a Fop too soon; But ’twas the Devil surely drew him in, Against the Light of Nature thus to sin. 1