FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   236   237   238   239   240   241   242   243   244   245   246   247   248   249   250   251   252   253   254   >>  
s. She thinks not of herself: she thinks alone How to cure him by whom she is undone. The more his wound recovers and gets ease, Her own grows worse, and widens day by day. The youth gets well; the lady languishes, Now warm, now cold, as fitful fevers play. His beauty heightens, like the flowering trees; She, miserable creature, melts away Like the weak snow, which some warm sun has found Fall'n, out of season, on a rising ground. And must she speak at last, rather than die? And must she plead, without another's aid? She must, she must: the vital moments fly She lives--she dies, a passion-wasted maid. At length she bursts all ties of modesty: Her tongue explains her eyes; the words are said And she asks pity, underneath that blow Which he, perhaps, that gave it did not know. O County Orlando! O King Sacripant! That fame of yours, say, what avails it ye? That lofty honour, those great deeds ye vaunt,-- Say, what's their value with the lovely she Shew me--recall to memory (for I can't)-- Shew me, I beg, one single courtesy That ever she vouchsafed ye, far or near, For all you've done and have endured for her. And you, if you could come to life again, O Agrican, how hard 'twould seem to you, Whose love was met by nothing but disdain, And vile repulses, shocking to go through! O Ferragus! O thousands, who, in vain, Did all that loving and great hearts could do, How would ye feel, to see, with all her charms, This thankless creature in a stripling's arms? The young Medoro had the gathering Of the world's rose, the rose untouch'd before; For never, since that garden blush'd with spring, Had human being dared to touch the door. To sanction it--to consecrate the thing-- The priest was called to read the service o'er, (For without marriage what can come but strife?) And the bride-mother was the shepherd's wife. All was perform'd, in short, that could be so In such a place, to make the nuptials good; Nor did the happy pair think fit to go, But spent the month and more within the wood. The lady to the stripling seemed to grow. His step her step, his eyes her eyes pursued; Nor did her love lose any of its zest, Though she was always hanging on his breast. In doors and out of doors, by night, by day, She had the charmer by her side for ever; Morning and evening
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   236   237   238   239   240   241   242   243   244   245   246   247   248   249   250   251   252   253   254   >>  



Top keywords:

stripling

 

creature

 

thinks

 

loving

 

thousands

 

pursued

 
charms
 

thankless

 
Though
 
hearts

repulses

 
twould
 
Morning
 

Agrican

 
evening
 

shocking

 
hanging
 

charmer

 
breast
 

disdain


Ferragus

 
Medoro
 

strife

 

marriage

 

called

 

priest

 

service

 

mother

 

shepherd

 

perform


untouch

 

nuptials

 

gathering

 
garden
 
sanction
 

consecrate

 

spring

 

lovely

 

miserable

 

season


rising

 

moments

 
ground
 

flowering

 
recovers
 
undone
 

widens

 
fevers
 
beauty
 

heightens