The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 519 pages of information about The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 4.

The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 519 pages of information about The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 4.

    JOHN
    I did refuse you, Margaret, in my pride.

    MARGARET
    If John rejected Margaret in his pride,
    (As who does not, being splenetic, refuse
    Sometimes old play-fellows,) the spleen being gone,
    The offence no longer lives. 
    O Woodvil, those were happy days,
    When we two first began to love.  When first,
    Under pretence of visiting my father,
    (Being then a stripling nigh upon my age)
    You came a wooing to his daughter, John. 
    Do you remember,
    With what a coy reserve and seldom speech,
    (Young maidens must be chary of their speech,)
    I kept the honors of my maiden pride? 
    I was your favourite then.

    JOHN
    O Margaret, Margaret! 
    These your submissions to my low estate,
    And cleavings to the fates of sunken Woodvil,
    Write bitter things ’gainst my unworthiness. 
    Thou perfect pattern of thy slander’d sex,
    Whom miseries of mine could never alienate,
    Nor change of fortune shake; whom injuries,
    And slights (the worst of injuries) which moved
    Thy nature to return scorn with like scorn,
    Then when you left in virtuous pride this house,
    Could not so separate, but now in this
    My day of shame, when all the world forsake me,
    You only visit me, love, and forgive me.

    MARGARET
    Dost yet remember the green arbour, John,
    In the south gardens of my father’s house,
    Where we have seen the summer sun go down,
    Exchanging true love’s vows without restraint? 
    And that old wood, you call’d your wilderness,
    And vow’d in sport to build a chapel in it,
    There dwell

        “Like hermit poor
        In pensive place obscure,”

    And tell your Ave Maries by the curls
    (Dropping like golden beads) of Margaret’s hair;
    And make confession seven times a day
    Of every thought that stray’d from love and Margaret;
    And I your saint the penance should appoint—­
    Believe me, sir, I will not now be laid
    Aside, like an old fashion.

    JOHN
    O lady, poor and abject are my thoughts,
    My pride is cured, my hopes are under clouds,
    I have no part in any good man’s love,
    In all earth’s pleasures portion have I none,
    I fade and wither in my own esteem,
    This earth holds not alive so poor a thing as I am. 
    I was not always thus. (Weeps.)

    MARGARET
    Thou noble nature,
    Which lion-like didst awe the inferior creatures,
    Now trampled on by beasts of basest quality,
    My dear heart’s lord, life’s pride, soul-honor’d John,
    Upon her knees (regard her poor request)
    Your favourite, once-beloved Margaret, kneels.

    JOHN
    What would’st thou, lady, ever-honor’d Margaret?

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Project Gutenberg
The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.