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The Poetical Works of Thomas Chatterton

with an essay on the Rowley poems by the Rev. Walter W. Skeat and a memoir by Edward Bell

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CXLIV.

Enter Bertha and Hurra.
Æl.
Ah! Bertha here!

Ber.
What sound is this? what means this lethal knell?
Where is my Ælla? speak; where? how is he?
Oh Ælla! art thou then alive and well?

Æl.
I live indeed; but do not live for thee.

Ber.
What means my Ælla?

Æl.
Here my meaning see.
Thy foulness urged my hand to give this wound;
It me unsprites.

Ber.
It hath unsprited me.

Æl.
Ah heavens! my Bertha falleth to the ground!
But yet I am a man, and so will be.

Hur.
Ælla! I am a Dane, but yet a friend to thee.