MARION! why that pensive brow? [i] What
disgust to life hast thou? Change that discontented
air; Frowns become not one so fair. ’Tis
not Love disturbs thy rest, Love’s a stranger
to thy breast: He, in dimpling smiles,
appears, Or mourns in sweetly timid tears; Or
bends the languid eyelid down, But shuns
the cold forbidding ‘frown’. Then
resume thy former fire, Some will love, and
all admire! While that icy aspect chills us,
Nought but cool Indiff’rence thrills us.
Would’st thou wand’ring hearts beguile,
Smile, at least, or seem to smile;
Eyes like thine were never meant To hide
their orbs in dark restraint; Spite of all thou
fain wouldst say, Still in truant beams they
play. Thy lips—but here my modest
Muse Her impulse chaste must needs refuse:
She blushes, curtsies, frowns,—in
short She Dreads lest the Subject should
transport me; And flying off, in search of Reason,
Brings Prudence back in proper season. All
I shall, therefore, say (whate’er [ii] I think,
is neither here nor there,) Is, that such lips,
of looks endearing, Were form’d for better
things than sneering. Of soothing
compliments divested, Advice at least’s disinterested;
Such is my artless song to thee, From all the
flow of Flatt’ry free; Counsel like mine
is as a brother’s, My heart is given
to some others; That is to say, unskill’d
to cozen, It shares itself among a dozen.
Marion, adieu! oh, pr’ythee
slight not
This warning, though it may delight not;
And, lest my precepts be displeasing,
To those who think remonstrance teazing,
At once I’ll tell thee our opinion,
Concerning Woman’s soft Dominion:
Howe’er we gaze, with admiration,
On eyes of blue or lips carnation;
Howe’er the flowing locks attract
us,
Howe’er those beauties may distract
us;
Still fickle, we are prone to rove,
These cannot fix our souls to love;
It is not too severe a stricture,
To say they form a pretty picture;
But would’st thou see the secret
chain,
Which binds us in your humble train,
To hail you Queens of all Creation,
Know, in a word, ’tis Animation.
BYRON, January 10, 1807.
[Footnote 1: The MS. of this
Poem is preserved at Newstead. “This was
to Harriet Maltby, afterwards Mrs. Nichols, written
upon her meeting Byron, and, ’being ‘cold,
silent’, and ‘reserved’ to him,’
by the advice of a Lady with whom she was staying;
quite foreign to her ‘usual’ manner, which
was gay, lively, and full of flirtation.”—Note
by Miss E. Pigot. (See p. 130, var. ii.)]
[Footnote a:
‘Harriet’.
[’MS. Newstead’.]]
[Footnote b:
‘All I shall therefore say of these’,
(’Thy pardon if my words displease’).
[’MS. Newstead’.]]
[Footnote c:
’And lest my precepts be found fault,
by
Those who approved the frown of M—lt-by’.
[’MS. Newstead’.]]
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