Public Domain Poetry And Stories - First Love by William Schwenck Gilbert
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First Love

    By William Schwenck Gilbert



    A clergyman in Berkshire dwelt,
    The REVEREND BERNARD POWLES,
    And in his church there weekly knelt
    At least a hundred souls.

    There little ELLEN you might see,
    The modest rustic belle;
    In maidenly simplicity,
    She loved her BERNARD well.

    Though ELLEN wore a plain silk gown
    Untrimmed with lace or fur,
    Yet not a husband in the town
    But wished his wife like her.

    Though sterner memories might fade,
    You never could forget
    The child-form of that baby-maid,
    The Village Violet!

    A simple frightened loveliness,
    Whose sacred spirit-part
    Shrank timidly from worldly stress,
    And nestled in your heart.

    POWLES woo'd with every well-worn plan
    And all the usual wiles
    With which a well-schooled gentleman
    A simple heart beguiles.

    The hackneyed compliments that bore
    World-folks like you and me,
    Appeared to her as if they wore
    The crown of Poesy.

    His winking eyelid sang a song
    Her heart could understand,
    Eternity seemed scarce too long
    When BERNARD squeezed her hand.

    He ordered down the martial crew
    Of GODFREY'S Grenadiers,
    And COOTE conspired with TINNEY to
    Ecstaticise her ears.

    Beneath her window, veiled from eye,
    They nightly took their stand;
    On birthdays supplemented by
    The Covent Garden band.

    And little ELLEN, all alone,
    Enraptured sat above,
    And thought how blest she was to own
    The wealth of POWLES'S love.

    I often, often wonder what
    Poor ELLEN saw in him;
    For calculated he was NOT
    To please a woman's whim.

    He wasn't good, despite the air
    An M.B. waistcoat gives;
    Indeed, his dearest friends declare
    No greater humbug lives.

    No kind of virtue decked this priest,
    He'd nothing to allure;
    He wasn't handsome in the least,
    He wasn't even poor.

    No he was cursed with acres fat
    (A Christian's direst ban),
    And gold yet, notwithstanding that,
    Poor ELLEN loved the man.

    As unlike BERNARD as could be
    Was poor old AARON WOOD
    (Disgraceful BERNARD'S curate he):
    He was extremely good.

    A BAYARD in his moral pluck
    Without reproach or fear,
    A quiet venerable duck
    With fifty pounds a year.

    No fault had he no fad, except
    A tendency to strum,
    In mode at which you would have wept,
    A dull harmonium.

    He had no gold with which to hire
    The minstrels who could best
    Convey a notion of the fire
    That raged within his breast.

    And so, when COOTE and TINNEY'S Own
    Had tootled all they knew,
    And when the Guards, completely blown,
    Exhaustedly withdrew,

    And NELL began to sleepy feel,
    Poor AARON then would come,
    And underneath her window wheel
    His plain harmonium.

    He woke her every morn at two,
    And having gained her ear,
    In vivid colours AARON drew
    The sluggard's grim career.

    He warbled Apiarian praise,
    And taught her in his chant
    To shun the dog's pugnacious ways,
    And imitate the ant.

    Still NELL seemed not, how much he played,
    To love him out and out,
    Although the admirable maid
    Respected him, no doubt.

    She told him of her early vow,
    And said as BERNARD'S wife
    It might be hers to show him how
    To rectify his life.

    "You are so pure, so kind, so true,
    Your goodness shines so bright,
    What use would ELLEN be to you?
    Believe me, you're all right."

    She wished him happiness and health,
    And flew on lightning wings
    To BERNARD with his dangerous wealth
    And all the woes it brings.



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