"Great or good, or kind or fair,

I will ne'er the more despair;

If she love me, this believe,

I will die ere she shall grieve.

"If she slight me when I wooe,

I can scorne and let her goe,

If she be not fit for me,

What care I for whom she be?"

"Do you not admire it, Constantia?" she said.

"Admire what?"

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"Why, the conceit of the song."

"I fear I did not heed it. I was thinking of--of--something else."

"Shall I sing it again?"

"Not to-night, dearest: and yet you may; methinks it is the last night I

shall ever listen to minstrelsy--not but that there is philosophy in

music, for it teaches us to forget care; it is to the ear what perfume

is to the smell. How exquisite is music! the only earthly joy of which

we are assured we shall taste in heaven. Play on."

Lady Frances again sung the lay, but with less spirit than before, for

she felt it was unheeded by her friend, and she laid the lute silently

on the ground when she had finished.

"Do you know," said Constance, after a time, "I pity your waiting lady,

who was married to Jerry White, as you call him, so unceremoniously."

"Pity her!" repeated Lady Frances, with as disdainful a toss of her

head, as if she had always formed a part of the aristocracy. "Pity her!

methinks the maid was well off to obtain the man who aspired to her

mistress."

"But she loved him not," observed Constantia, in a sad voice.

"Poor Jerry!" laughed Lady Frances, "how could she love him; the

Commonwealth jester; wanting only cap, bells, and a hobby-horse, to be

fool, par excellence, of the British dominions? And yet he is no fool

either; more knave than fool, though my father caught him at last."

"It was a severe jest," said Constantia.

"Why, it was--but verily I believe my father thought there was danger of

having two fools at his court, instead of one. It was after this

fashion. Jerry presumed a good deal upon the encouragement his Highness

had given him--for the Protector loves a jest as well as any, when there

is nobody by to repeat it to the grave ones: and his chaplain, Jerry

White, chimed in with his humour, and was well-timed in his conceits;

and this so pleased my good father, that he suffered him much in private

about his person. So he fell, or pretended to fall, desperately in love

with my giddy self. It was just at the time, too, when Charles Stuart

made his overtures of marriage, that so caught my mother's fancy; and my

imagination was marvellously moved by two such strings to my bow--a

prince and a preacher--a rogue and a fool:--only think of it,

Constantia! However, Jerry grew much too tender, and I began to think

seriously I was going too far; so I told my sister Mary, and I am sure

she told my father; for, as I was passing through a private anteroom at

Whitehall, his reverence was there in ambush, and commenced his usual

jargon of love and dove, faithfulness and fidelity, gentleness and

gentility, and at last fell upon his knees, while I, half laughing, and

half wondering how his rhapsody would end, as end it must--Well, there!

fancy Jerry's countenance, clasped hands, and bended knees! and I

pulling my hood (I had just returned from a walk) over my face to

conceal my merriment, trying to disengage my hand from the creature's

claws--when, I really don't know how, but there stood my father before

me, with a half smile on his lip, and his usual severity of aspect.




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