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page: endpaper
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Note: Bookplate with standing female angel blowing trumpet and seated female
angel. Between the two figures is a flowing banner on which is inscribed
the owner's name. Below the figures and the ower's name is an inscribed poem.
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THOMAS
JAMES WISE
HIS BOOK
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- BOOKS BRING ME FRIENDS
- WHERE'ER ON EARTH I BE.
- SOLACE OF SOLITUDE&
- BONDS OF SOCIETY!
page: [i]
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Note: The note is by WMR, who quotes from DGR's letter of 22 November 1860 to
William Allingham
To William Allingham
he wrote on Nov. 22,
1860, â
does Dennis
Shand displease you
for anything but its
impropriety?â
p.
245
Transcription Gap: Hake/Compton-Rickett text of Swinburne letter (can be found elsewhere)
Transcribed Note (page [i]):
Note: In this bound volume, Wise included pages 39-40 of the Hake/Compton-Rickett edition of Swinburne's
letters, which has been omitted in this transcription
page: [unpaginated]
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page: [iv]
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Manuscript Addition: Ashley 1395
Editorial Description: British Museum Library catalog number.
page: 1
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- The shadows fall along the wall,
- It's night at Haye-la-Serre;
- The maidens weave since day grew eve,
- The lady's in her chair.
- O passing slow the long hours go
- With time to think and sigh,
- When weary maidens weave beneath
- A listless lady's eye.
- It's two days that Earl Simon's gone
-
10 And it's the second night;
- At Haye-la-Serre the lady's fair,
- In June the moon is light.
- O it's âMaids, ye'll wake till I come back,â
- And the hound's i' the lady's chair:
- No shuttles fly, the work stands by,
- It's play at Haye-la-Serre.
- The night is worn, the lamp's forlorn,
- The shadows waste and fail;
- There's morning air at Haye-la-Serre,
-
20 The watching maids look pale.
page: 2
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- O all unmarked the birds at dawn
- Where drowsy maidens be;
- But heard too soon the lark's first tune
- Beneath the trysting-tree.
- âHold me thy hand, sweet Dennis Shand,
- Says the Lady Joan de Haye,
- âThat thou to-morrow do forget
- To-day and yesterday.
- âFor many a weary month to come
-
30 My lord keeps house with me,
- And sighing summer must lie cold
- In winter's company.
- âAnd many an hour I'll pass thee by
- And see thee and be seen;
- Yet not a glance must tell by chance
- How sweet these hours have been.
- âWe've all to fear; there's Maud the spy,
- There's Ann whose face I scor'd,
- There's Blanch tells Huot everything,
-
40 And Huot loves my lord.
- âBut O and it's my Dennis'll know,
- When my eyes look weary dim,
- Who finds the gold for his girdle-fee
- And who keeps love for him.â
page: 3
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- The morrow's come and the morrow-night,
- It's feast at Haye-la-Serre,
- And Dennis Shand the cup must hand
- Beside Earl Simon's chair.
- And still when the high pouring's done
-
50 And cup and flagon clink,
- Till his lady's lips have touched the brim
- Earl Simon will not drink.
- âBut it's, âJoan my wife,â Earl Simon says,
- âYour maids are white and wan.â
- And it's, âO,â she says, âthey've
watched the night
- With Maud's sick sister Ann.â
- But it's, âLady Joan and Joan my bird,
- Yourself look white and wan.â
- And it's, âO, I've walked the night myself
-
60 To pull the herbs for Ann:
- âAnd some of your knaves were at the hutch
- And some in the cellarage,
- But the only one that watched with us
- Was Dennis Shand your page.
- âLook on the boy, sweet honey lord,
- And mark his drooping e'e:
- The rosy colour's not yet back
- That paled in serving me.â
page: 4
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- O it's, âWife, your maids are foolish jades,
-
70 And you're a silly chuck,
- And the lazy knaves shall get their staves
- About their ears for luck:
- âBut Dennis Shand may take the cup
- And pour the wine to his hand;
- Wife, thou shalt touch it with thy lips,
- And drink thou, Dennis Shand!â