Appendices
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2024
Summary
(Love-Letters Part One pages 262–64).
To the Lady—
Madam,
’TIS not always the divine
graces wherewith Heaven
has adorn’d your resplendent beauties,
that can maintain the innumerable
conquests they gain, without
a noble goodness, which may
make you sensibly compassionate
the poor and forlorn captives you
have undone: But, most fair of
your Sex, ‘tis I alone that have a
destiny more cruel and severe, and
find my self wounded from your
very frowns, and secur’d a slave
as well as made one; the very
scorn from those triumphant stars,
your eyes, have the same effects
as if they shin’d with the continual
splendour of ravishing smiles,
and I can no more shun their killing
influence, than their all-saving
aspects, and I shall expire contented,
since I fall by so glorious a
Fate; if you will vouchsafe to pronounce
my doom from that storehouse
of perfection, your mouth,
from lips that open like the blushing
rose, strow’d o’re with morning
dew, and from a breath sweeter
than holy incense; in order to
which, I approach you; most excellent
beauty with this most humble
petition, that you will deign
to permit me to throw my unworthy
self before the Throne of
your mercy, there to receive the
sentence of my life or death, a
happiness though incomparably
too great for so mean a Vassal,
yet with that reverence and awe
I shall receive it, as I wou’d the
sentence of the Gods, and which
I will no more resist than I wou’d
the Thunderbolts of Jove, or the
revenge of angry Juno: For, Madam,
my immense passion knows
no medium between life and death,
and as I never had the presumption
to aspire to the glory of the
first, I am not so abject as to fear
I am wholly depriv’d of the glory
of the last; I have too long lain
convicted, extend your mercy,
and put me now out of pain: You
have often wreck’d me to confess
my Promethian fire; spare the cruel
Vulture of despair, take him
from my heart in pity, and either
by killing word, or blasting
Lightning from those refulgent
eyes, Pronounce the death of
Madam, Your admiring slave Foscario.
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- Quantitative Literary Analysis of the Works of Aphra BehnWords of Passion, pp. 239 - 274Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2023