Notes & Queries Archive
REPLY1850

"My Love and I for kisses played, &c."

By S. W. S.

The little *jeu d'esprit* which "Dr. RIMBAULT" has given from Paget's *Common Place Book*:— "My love and I for kisses play'd," occurs in the MS. volume from which James Boswell extracted "Shakspeare's Verses on the King," but with a much better reading of the last couplet:— "Nay then, quoth shee, is this your wrangling vaine? Give mee my stakes, take your own stakes againe." They are entitled, "Upon a Lover and his Mistris playing for Kisses," and are there without any name or signature. They remind us of Lilly's very elegant "Cupid and Campaspe." The ballad, or rather ode, as Drayton himself…

Topics: Victorian Poetry, Literature, Historical Customs

Locations: London, Bristol, France