WELL! if ever I saw such another man, since my mother bound my head! You a gentleman! Marry come up! I wonder where you were bred? I am sure such words do not become a man of your cloth! I would not give such language to a dog! faith and troth! Yes, you called my master a knave! Fie! Mr. Sheridan! 'tis a shame For a parson, who should know better things, to come out with such a name. Knave in your teeth, Mr. Sheridan! 'Tis both a shame and a sin; And the dean, my master, in an honester man than you and all your kin: He has more goodness in his little finger, than you have in your whole body! My master is a parsonable man, and not a spindle-shanked hoddydoddy! And now whereby I find you would fain make an excuse. Because my master, one day, in anger, called you goose! Which, and I am sure I have been his servant four years since October, And be never called me worse than sweetheart drunk or sober. Nor that I know that his Reverence was ever concerned, to my know-ledge; Though you and your come-rogues keep him out so late, in your College. You say you will eat grass on his grave: a Christian eat grass! Whereby you now confess yourself to be a goose, or an ass. But that's as much as to say, that my master should die before ye. Well! Well! That's as God pleases, and I don't believe that's a true story! And so say I told you so, and you may go tell my master! What care I? And I don't care who knows it, 'tis all one to Mary! Everybody knows that I love to tell truth, and shame the Devil; I am but a poor servant; but I think Gentlefolks should be vivil! Besides, you found fault with our vittels, one day that you were here: I remember it was upon a Tuesday, of all days in the year! And Saunders, the man, says you are always jesting and mocking, 'Mary,' said he, one day, as I was mending my master's stocking, 'My master is so fond of that minister, that keeps the school! I thought my master was a wise man; but that man makes him a fool!' 'Saunders,' says I, 'I would rather than a quart of ale, He would come into our kitchen; and I would pin a dish-clout to his tail!' And now I must go, and get Saunders to direct this letter. For I write but a sad scrawl; but my sister Marget, she writes better. Well! but I must run, and make the bed, before my master comes from prayers. And see now, it strikes ten, and I hear him coming upstairs. Whereof I could say more to your verses, if I could write written hand; And so I remain, in a civil way, your servant to command,--Mary. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE YOUNG MYSTIC by LOUIS UNTERMEYER NO PLATONIQUE LOVE by WILLIAM CARTWRIGHT THE COLLAR-BONE OF A HARE by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS UNCLE OUT O' DEBT AN' OUT O' DANGER by WILLIAM BARNES THE CHIVALRY OF THE SEA by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES IN LONDON ON SATURDAY NIGHT by ROBERT WILLIAMS BUCHANAN LAST DAYS OF QUEEN ELIZABETH by EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER-LYTTON |