
Miss Mary Bennet, life’s middle child:
Dour, unremarked and, by choosing, unstyled.
Watching your sisters play whist in their pairs
Consigned to their shadows, resigned to your prayers.
Oh, to be Jane! The most prized of them all
Who turned every head at the Netherfield Ball.
Or Lizzy, who routs senseless suitors through wit
Delighting your father more than he’d admit.
Would you be like Kitty who follows the crowd?
Or Lydia, brash and unsuitably loud?
Alas, those sweet psalms you impart by the dozen
Did fail in the end to secure you a cousin
And having entailed the estate to a son
The Bennets have lost and the Collins have won.
And so, dearest Mary, were God so to judge
Will your role be that of your poor mother’s drudge?
Or is your intended more than a mere dream
Who’s destined to save you as part of His scheme?
Now, blow out the candle and softly to bed
Let sleep chase such worriment out of your head.
And judge not so harshly, as you often do
For, one day we all may be studying you.