The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters. John Keats

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He’ll surmise sagely of a dwelling house,

       And plot, in the same minute, how to chouse

       The owner out of it; show him a” “Peace!

       Peace! nor contrive thy mistress’ ire to rouse!”

       Return’d the Princess, “my tongue shall not cease

       Till from this hated match I get a free release.

      VIII.

      “Ah, beauteous mortal!” “Hush!” quoth Coralline,

       “Really you must not talk of him, indeed.”

       “You hush!” reply’d the mistress, with a shinee

       Of anger in her eyes, enough to breed

       In stouter hearts than nurse’s fear and dread:

       ’Twas not the glance itself made nursey flinch,

       But of its threat she took the utmost heed;

       Not liking in her heart an hour-long pinch,

       Or a sharp needle run into her back an inch.

      IX.

      So she was silenc’d, and fair Bellanaine,

       Writhing her little body with ennui,

       Continued to lament and to complain,

       That Fate, cross-purposing, should let her be

       Ravish’d away far from her dear countree;

       That all her feelings should be set at nought,

       In trumping up this match so hastily,

       With lowland blood; and lowland blood she thought

       Poison, as every staunch true-born Imaian ought.

      X.

      Sorely she griev’d, and wetted three or four

       White Provence rose-leaves with her faery tears,

       But not for this cause; alas! she had more

       Bad reasons for her sorrow, as appears

       In the fam’d memoirs of a thousand years,

       Written by Crafticant, and published

       By Parpaglion and Co., (those sly compeers

       Who rak’d up ev’ry fact against the dead,)

       In Scarab Street, Panthea, at the Jubal’s Head.

      XI.

      Where, after a long hypercritic howl

       Against the vicious manners of the age,

       He goes on to expose, with heart and soul,

       What vice in this or that year was the rage,

       Backbiting all the world in every page;

       With special strictures on the horrid crime,

       (Section’d and subsection’d with learning sage,)

       Of faeries stooping on their wings sublime

       To kiss a mortal’s lips, when such were in their prime.

      XII.

      Turn to the copious index, you will find

       Somewhere in the column, headed letter B,

       The name of Bellanaine, if you’re not blind;

       Then pray refer to the text, and you will see

       An article made up of calumny

       Against this highland princess, rating her

       For giving way, so over fashionably,

       To this new-fangled vice, which seems a burr

       Stuck in his moral throat, no coughing e’er could stir.

      XIII.

      There he says plainly that she lov’d a man!

       That she around him flutter’d, flirted, toy’d,

       Before her marriage with great Elfinan;

       That after marriage too, she never joy’d

       In husband’s company, but still employ’d

       Her wits to ‘scape away to Angle-land;

       Where liv’d the youth, who worried and annoy’d

       Her tender heart, and its warm ardours fann’d

       To such a dreadful blaze, her side would scorch her hand.

      XIV.

      But let us leave this idle tittle-tattle

       To waiting-maids, and bedroom coteries,

       Nor till fit time against her fame wage battle.

       Poor Elfinan is very ill at ease,

       Let us resume his subject if you please:

       For it may comfort and console him much,

       To rhyme and syllable his miseries;

       Poor Elfinan! whose cruel fate was such,

       He sat and curs’d a bride he knew he could not touch.

      XV.

      Soon as (according to his promises)

       The bridal embassy had taken wing,

       And vanish’d, bird-like, o’er the suburb trees,

       The Emperor, empierc’d with the sharp sting

       Of love, retired, vex’d and murmuring

       Like any drone shut from the fair bee-queen,

       Into his cabinet, and there did fling

       His limbs upon a sofa, full of spleen,

       And damn’d his House of Commons, in complete chagrin.

      XVI.

      “I’ll trounce some of the members,” cry’d the Prince,

       “I’ll put a mark against some rebel names,

       I’ll make the Opposition-benches wince,

       I’ll show them very soon, to all their shames,

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