Page:Joan of Arc - Southey (1796).djvu/148

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
136
JOAN OF ARC.
"She lov'd me! day by day I dwelt with her, 230
Her voice was music—very sweet her smiles!
I left her! left her Charles, in evil hour,
To fight thy battles. Thou meantime didst come,
Staining most foul her spotless purity;
For she was pure—my Agnes! even as snow 235
Fall'n in some cleft where never the fierce Sun
Pours his hot ray—most foul, for once most fair:
My poor polluted Agnes!—Thou bad man!
Thou hast almost shaken my faith in Heaven.
I see thee rioting in sloth and guilt, 240
And yet thou restest pillowing thy head
Even on her bosom! I, tho' innocent
Of ill, the victim of another's vice,
Drag on the loathsome burthen of existence,
And doubt Heaven's justice!"
So he said, and frown'd 245
Dark as that, man who at Mohammed's door
Knock'd fierce and frequent; from whose fearful look
Bath'd with cold damps, every beholder fled.

Even