William Blake (1757–1827). The Poetical Works. 1908.
The Pickering MS.Mary
S
Came into the ball-room among the fair;
The young men and maidens around her throng,
And these are the words upon every tongue:
Or again does return the golden times;
Her eyes outshine every brilliant ray,
She opens her lips—’tis the Month of May.’
To augment with sweet smiles all the joys of the night,
Nor once blushes to own to the rest of the fair
That sweet Love and Beauty are worthy our care.
And repeated with pleasure the joys of the night,
And Mary arose among friends to be free,
But no friend from henceforward thou, Mary, shalt see.
And some, when she passèd by, shut to the door;
A damp cold came o’er her, her blushes all fled;
Her lilies and roses are blighted and shed.
Why was I not born like this envious race?
Why did Heaven adorn me with bountiful hand,
And then set me down in an envious land?
And not to raise envy, is call’d Christian love;
But if you raise envy your merit’s to blame
For planting such spite in the weak and the tame.
I will keep from the ball, and my eyes shall not shine;
And if any girl’s lover forsakes her for me
I’ll refuse him my hand, and from envy be free.’
‘Proud Mary’s gone mad,’ said the child in the street;
She went out in morning in plain neat attire,
And came home in evening bespatter’d with mire.
She forgot it was night, and she trembled and cried;
She forgot it was night, she forgot it was morn,
Her soft memory imprinted with faces of scorn;
Like foul fiends inhabiting Mary’s mild brain;
She remembers no face like the Human Divine;
All faces have envy, sweet Mary, but thine;
And thine is a face of mild sorrow and care,
And thine is a face of wild terror and fear
That shall never be quiet till laid on its bier.