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Untitled Article
horseback * in carriages of all sorts ; holiday gear on their forms , holiday smiles on their faces . Mignionette . Why , Mary Anne , as they say of the golden age , what a pretty period ! L . ( Singing . ) * Come , follow , follow , follow , follow , follow , follow me . ' Mignionette . ( Singing . ) * Whither shall I follow , whither shall I follow , whither shall I follow , follow thee V L . * To the greenwood , to the greenwood , to the greenwood , greenwood tree . Old Ashford . Very good advice , and the faster we walk the better . Mignionette . How I do love to see sunshine upon a cottage wall ! L . And flowers in a cottage garden .
PoeL Peasants , ye are peers , Care not , fear not ! Peasants , ye are peers , Shut your ears and hear not When they spurn your lowly lot . The blessed sunshine comes to you , The flowers in many varied hue , And often love , both kind and true , Smiles within your cot . Peasants , ye are peers , Care not , fear not ! Peasants , ye are peers , Shut your ears and heat not When they spurn your lowly lot .
Old Ashford . Very good , very good ; but I wish they had higher wages , and were better clothed and fed . Young Ashford . Poets speak of time future , rather than time present . L . They should be called hope-feeders ; they gather the honey of hope from every flower , and hive it up for others to use . Mary Anne . Which way should we go?—through the wood , and come out upon the ground ? Old Ashford . The path wilT be very dirty after so much wet . Young Ashford . The high wind in the night has settled that matter . Mignionette . Well , my little fellow , do you expect this gate to be the high road to fortune ? There ! What will you do with it , buy a tap ribbon for granny ?
Young Ashford . Where ' s Mignionette ! ' Mary Anne . Talking to the boy at the gate . Young Ashford . Come , you will be too late . Mary Anne . Here she comes ! How the people are flocking ! Look , there is the Avon , like a huge silver serpent , with its scales flashing in the sunlight . ( Aside . ) What is the matter with L . I Mignionette . The tears always rush to her eyes at the sight of a beautiful landscape . Young Ashford . Look , there b one of the club 1 Mignionette . Club / indeed ! You should call them votaresses of Diana !
Untitled Article
i 26 Charade Drama *
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1835, page 126, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2642/page/46/
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