Of which I am allowed to make disposal,

Shall be amongst you shared; for I have hope

In this at least my will may be fulfilled.

And what I wear upon my way to death

Is yours-nor envy me on this occasion

The pomp of earth upon the road to heaven.

[To the ladies of her chamber.

To you, my Alice, Gertrude, Rosamund,

I leave my pearls, my garments: you are young,

And ornament may still delight your hearts.

You, Margaret, possess the nearest claims,

To you I should be generous: for I leave you

The most unhappy woman of them all.

That I have not avenged your husband's fault

On you I hope my legacy will prove.

The worth of gold, my Hannah, charms not thee;

Nor the magnificence of precious stones:

My memory, I know, will be to thee

The dearest jewel; take this handkerchief,

I worked it for thee, in the hours of sorrow,

With my own hands, and my hot, scalding tears

Are woven in the texture:-you will bind

My eyes with this, when it is time: this last

Sad service I would wish but from my Hannah.

KENNEDY.

O Melvil! I cannot support it.

MARY.

Come,

Come all and now receive my last farewell.

[She stretches forth her hands; the WOMEN

violently weeping, fall successively at her feet,

and kiss her outstretched hand.

Margaret, farewell-my Alice, fare thee well;

Thanks, Burgoyn, for thy honest, faithful service-

Thy lips are hot, my Gertrude:-I have been

Much hated, yet have been as much beloved.

May a deserving husband bless my Gertrude,

For this warm, glowing heart is formed for love.

Bertha, thy choice is better, thou hadst rather

Become the chaste and pious bride of heaven;

Oh! haste thee to fulfil thy vows; the goods

Of earth are all deceitful; thou may'st learn

This lesson from thy queen. No more; farewell,

Farewell, farewell, my friends, farewell for ever.

[She turns suddenly from them; all but MELVIL

retire at different sides.

SCENE VII.

MARY, MELVIL.

MARY (after the others are all gone).

I have arranged all temporal concerns,

And hope to leave the world in debt to none;

Melvil, one thought alone there is which binds

My troubled soul, nor suffers it to fly

Delighted and at liberty to heaven.

MELVIL.

Disclose it to me; ease your bosom, trust

Your doubts, your sorrows, to your faithful friend.

MARY.

I see eternity's abyss before me;

Soon must I stand before the highest Judge,

And have not yet appeased the Holy One.

A priest of my religion is denied me,

And I disdain to take the sacrament,

The holy, heavenly nourishment, from priests

Of a false faith; I die in the belief

Of my own church, for that alone can save.

MELVIL.

Compose your heart; the fervent, pious wish

Is prized in heaven as high as the performance.

The might of tyrants can but bind the hands,

The heart's devotion rises free to God,

The word is dead-'tis faith which brings to life.

MARY.

The heart is not sufficient of itself;

Our faith must have some earthly pledge to ground

Its claim to the high bliss of heaven. For this

Our God became incarnate, and enclosed

Mysteriously his unseen heavenly grace

Within an outward figure of a body.

The church it is, the holy one, the high one,

Which rears for us the ladder up to heaven:-

'Tis called the Catholic Apostolic church,-

For 'tis but general faith can strengthen faith;

Where thousands worship and adore the heat

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