In a far country once there lived a wench,
buxom and keen, and apt for many sports,
who would, at night on the broad tavern-bench
be most kind and helpful to those out of sorts.
Her name's forgotten, so too is her trade,
for that was a long time ago, and memory's weak;
and not just memory, but other things fade
and we don't always get the things we seek.
Fornication, priests tell us, is a great sin
and we should at all costs avoid committing it;
yet when we show that we can silver win
some warm embrace we always find to fit.
I cannot get these thoughts out of my head,
but do remember now the wench is dead.
Odd ravings, comments, and other wastes of time. Some are in plain prose, yet others are in rhyme.
17 December 2006
Recollecting Marlowe
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2 comments:
Is this synchronistic, or consciously related to events in Ispwich UK ?
It's a coincidence. I wasn't thinking of the Ipswich murders, but of a line in Marlowe's Jew of Malta about which there was some discussion on a comment page on Making Light.
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