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The poetical works of George MacDonald in two volumes — Volume 1 by MacDonald, George, 1824-1905

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_A knock at the door. Enter Brother_ ROBERT _with a light_.
_Robert_.
Head in your hands as usual! You will fret
Your life out, sitting moping in the dark.
Come, it is supper-time.
_Julian_.
I will not sup to-night.
_Robert_.
Not sup? You'll never live to be a saint.
_Julian_.
A saint! The devil has me by the heel.
_Robert_.
So has he all saints; as a boy his kite,
Which ever struggles higher for his hold.
It is a silly devil to gripe so hard;--
He should let go his hold, and then he has you.
If you'll not come, I'll leave the light with you.
Hark to the chorus! Brother Stephen sings.
Chorus. _Always merry, and never drunk.
That's the life of the jolly monk_.

SONG.

They say the first monks were lonely men,
Praying each in his lonely den,
Rising up to kneel again,
Each a skinny male Magdalene,
Peeping scared from out his hole
Like a burrowing rabbit or a mole;
But years ring changes as they roll--
Cho. _Now always merry, &c_.
When the moon gets up with her big round face,
Like Mistress Poll's in the market-place,
Down to the village below we pace;--
We know a supper that wants a grace:
Past the curtsying women we go,
Past the smithy, all a glow,
To the snug little houses at top of the row--
Cho. _For always merry, &c_.
And there we find, among the ale,
The fragments of a floating tale:
To piece them together we never fail;
And we fit them rightly, I'll go bail.
And so we have them all in hand,
The lads and lasses throughout the land,
And we are the masters,--you understand?
Cho. _So always merry, &c_.
Last night we had such a game of play
With the nephews and nieces over the way,
All for the gold that belonged to the clay
That lies in lead till the judgment-day!
The old man's soul they'd leave in the lurch,
But we saved her share for old Mamma Church.
How they eyed the bag as they stood in the porch!
Cho. _Oh! always merry, and never drunk_.
That's the life of the jolly monk!
_Robert_.
The song is hardly to your taste, I see!
Where shall I set the light?
_Julian_.
I do not need it.
_Robert_.
Come, come! The dark is a hot-bed for fancies.
I wish you were at table, were it only
To stop the talking of the men about you.
You in the dark are talked of in the light.
_Julian_.
Well, brother, let them talk; it hurts not me.
_Robert_.
No; but it hurts your friend to hear them say,
You would be thought a saint without the trouble;
You do no penance that they can discover.
You keep shut up, say some, eating your heart,
Possessed with a bad conscience, the worst demon.
You are a prince, say others, hiding here,
Till circumstance that bound you, set you free.
To-night, there are some whispers of a lady
That would refuse your love.
_Julian_.
Ay! What of her?
_Robert_.
I heard no more than so; and that you came
To seek the next best service you could find:
Turned from the lady's door, and knocked at God's.
_Julian_.
One part at least is true: I knock at God's;
He has not yet been pleased to let me in.
As for the lady--that is--so far true,
But matters little. Had I less to think,
This talking might annoy me; as it is,
Why, let the wind set there, if it pleases it;
I keep in-doors.