MARGARET
A worthy pair of exiles,
Two whom the politics of state
revenge,
In final issue of long civil
broils,
Have houseless driven from
your native France,
To wander idle in these English
woods,
Where now ye live; most part
Thinking on home, and all
the joys of France,
Where grows the purple vine.
SIR WALTER
These woods, young stranger,
And grassy pastures, which
the slim deer loves,
Are they less beauteous than
the land of France,
Where grows the purple vine?
MARGARET
I cannot tell.
To an indifferent eye both
shew alike.
’Tis not the scene,
But all familiar objects in
the scene,
Which now ye miss, that constitute
a difference.
Ye had a country, exiles,
ye have none now;
Friends had ye, and much wealth,
ye now have nothing;
Our manners, laws, our customs,
all are foreign to you,
I know ye loathe them, cannot
learn them readily;
And there is reason, exiles,
ye should love
Our English earth less than
your land of France,
Where grows the purple vine;
where all delights grow,
Old custom has made pleasant.
SIR WALTER
You, that are read
So deeply in our story, what
are you?
MARGARET
A bare adventurer; in brief
a woman,
That put strange garments
on, and came thus far
To seek an ancient friend:
And having spent her stock
of idle words,
And feeling some tears coming,
Hastes now to clasp Sir Walter
Woodvil’s knees,
And beg a boon for Margaret,
his poor ward. (Kneeling.)
SIR WALTER
Not at my feet, Margaret,
not at my feet.
MARGARET
Yes, till her suit is answer’d.
SIR WALTER
Name it.
MARGARET
A little boon, and yet so
great a grace,
She fears to ask it.
SIR WALTER
Some riddle, Margaret?
MARGARET
No riddle, but a plain request.
SIR WALTER
Name it.
MARGARET
Free liberty of Sherwood,
And leave to take her lot
with you in the forest.
SIR WALTER
A scant petition, Margaret,
but take it,
Seal’d with an old man’s
tears.—
Rise, daughter of Sir Rowland.
(Addresses them both.)
O you most worthy,
You constant followers of
a man proscribed,
Following poor misery in the
throat of danger;
Fast servitors to craz’d
and penniless poverty,
Serving poor poverty without
hope of gain;
Kind children of a sire unfortunate;
Green clinging tendrils round
a trunk decay’d,
Which needs must bring on
you timeless decay;
Fair living forms to a dead
carcase join’d;—
What shall I say?
Better the dead were gather’d
to the dead,
Than death and life in disproportion
meet.—
Go, seek your fortunes, children.—