In John Wilmot’s “The Imperfect Enjoyment” he illustrates a man who is describing his incapacity to please a woman. In the poem he illustrates what he is doing to try to make the woman happy, he says he is kissing her but not really pleasing her. The woman says “When, with a thousand kisses wandering o’er my panting bossem, “Is there then no more?” She cries. “All this to love and rapture’s due; must we not pay a debt to pleasure too?” The man gets angry about
In John Wilmot’s “The Imperfect Enjoyment” he illustrates a man who is describing his incapacity to please a woman. In the poem he illustrates what he is doing to try to make the woman happy, he says he is kissing her but not really pleasing her. The woman says “When, with a thousand kisses wandering o’er my panting bossem, “Is there then no more?” She cries. “All this to love and rapture’s due; must we not pay a debt to pleasure too?” The man gets angry about