< Page:Oxford Book of English Verse 1250-1900.djvu
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ANONYMOUS

She. If ye take heed, it is no need

Such words to say to me ; For oft ye prayed, and long assayed,

Or I loved you, parde : And though that I of ancestry

A baron's daughter be, Yet have you proved how I you loved,

A squire of low degree ; And ever shall, whatso befall

To die therefore anone ; For, in my mind, of all mankind

I love but you alone.

He. A baron's child to be beguiled,

It were a cursed deed ! To be felaw with an outlaw

Almighty God forbede ! Yet better were the poor squyere

Alone to forest yede Than ye shall say another day

That by my cursed rede Ye were betrayed. Wherefore, good maid,

The best rede that I can, Is, that I to the green-wood go,

Alone, a banished man.

She. Whatever befall, I never shall

Of this thing be upbraid : But if ye go, and leave me so, Then have ye me betrayed. Remember you wele, how that ye dele ; For if ye, as ye said,

��yede] went.

�� �

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