A hitherto unpublished portrait of Emily 
 Patmore, "The Angel in the House" by 
 J. Brett, R.A. 
 
 Reproduced by courtesy of Mr. J. Deighton Patmore.
 
 THE ANGEL IN THE HOUSE, 
 
 7s it not strange that there are innumerable hymns and 
 poems composed for other gods, but that not one of the many 
 poets who spring up in the world has ever composed a verse in 
 honour of Love, who is such and so great a god ? PLATO.
 
 THE 
 
 ANGEL IN THE HOUSE. 
 
 BY 
 
 COVENTRY PATMORE. 
 
 PART I. 
 
 BOOK I. THE BETROTHAL. 
 BOOK II. THE ESPOUSALS. 
 
 MACMILLAN AND GO. 
 
 1863. 
 
 Tke right of Tratulalivn it reterved.
 
 THE 
 
 "ANGEL IN THE HOUSE 
 
 |s 
 
 TO THE MEMORY OF HER BT WHOM AND FOB WHOM 
 I BECAME A POET. 
 
 20766O9
 
 CONTENTS. 
 
 BOOK I. 
 
 THE BETROTHAL. 
 
 PAGE 
 
 THE PKOLOGUE 3 
 
 CAHTO 
 
 I. THE CATHEDRAL CLOSE 9 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 i. Love's Reality 9 
 
 i. Love's Immortality 1 1 
 
 3. The Poet's Confidence 12 
 
 4. The Poet's Humility 13 
 
 5. The Impossibility 14 
 
 6. Heaven and Earth 15 
 
 The Cathedral Close 16 
 
 II. MARY AND MILDRED 23 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 i. The Paragon 23 
 
 i. The Haven 27 
 
 3. Love and Duty 29 
 
 4. A Distinction 30 
 
 Mary and Mildred 31 
 
 III. HONORIA 37 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 i. The Lover 37 
 
 . The Fount of Honour 40 
 
 3. The Attainment 42 
 
 Honoria 43
 
 IV CONTENTS. 
 
 CANTO PAGB 
 
 IV. THE MORNING CALL 49 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. The Rose of the World 49 
 
 2. The Tribute 52 
 
 3. Compensation 54 
 
 The Morning Call 55 
 
 V. THE VIOLETS 59 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 i. The Parallel 59 
 
 i . Love in Tears 64 
 
 3. Prospective Faith 65 
 
 4. Venus Victrix 66 
 
 The Violets ' ... 67 
 
 VI. THE DEAN 73 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. Perfect Love rare 73 
 
 2. Love Justified 75 
 
 3. Love Serviceable 77 
 
 4. Love a Virtue 78 
 
 5. A Riddle Solved 79 
 
 The Dean 80 
 
 VII. ^ETNA AND THE MOON 85 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. The Prodigal 85 
 
 2. The Preacher taught 87 
 
 3. " For ever" 88 
 
 4. The Metamorphosis 89 
 
 JEtna and the Moon 90 
 
 VIII. SAEUM PLAIN 97 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. Life of Life 97 
 
 2. The Eevelation 99
 
 CONTENTS. V 
 
 CANTO PAGE 
 
 3. The Spirit's Epochs 100 
 
 4. The Prototype /oi 
 
 5. The Praise of Love 102 
 
 Sarum Plain 103 
 
 IX. SAHARA 109 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 I. The Wife's Tragedy 109 
 
 i. Common Graces in 
 
 3. The Zest of Life 113 
 
 4. Fool and Wise 114 
 
 Sahara 115 
 
 X. GOING TO CHUKCH 121 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. The Joyful Wisdom 121 
 
 2. Truth and Love 125 
 
 3. The Devices 126 
 
 Going to Church 127 
 
 XI. THE DANCE 135 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. The Daughter of Eve 135 
 
 2. Aurea Dicta 138 
 
 The Dance 141 
 
 XII. THE ABDICATION 147 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. The Chace 147 
 
 2. Denied 152 
 
 3. The Churl 154 
 
 The Abdication 155 
 
 THE EPILOGUE , , 161
 
 VI CONTENTS. 
 
 BOOK II. 
 
 THE ESPOUSALS. 
 
 PAGE 
 
 THE PROLOGUE 167 
 
 CANTO 
 
 I. ACCEPTED 173 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. The Song of Songs 173 
 
 2. The Kites 175 
 
 3. Orpheus 176 
 
 4. Nearest the Dearest 177 
 
 5. Star and Planet 178 
 
 Accepted 179 
 
 II. THE COURSE OF TRUE LOVE 183 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. The Changed Allegiance 183 
 
 2. Beauty 189 
 
 3. Lais and Lucretia 190 
 
 The Course of True Love 191 
 
 III. THE COUNTY BALL 197 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. Love Ceremonious 197 
 
 2. The Kainbow 199 
 
 3. A Paradox 200 
 
 The County Ball 201 
 
 IV. LOVE IN IDLENESS 207 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. Honour and Desert 207 
 
 2. Love and Honour 209 
 
 3. Valour Misdirected 210 
 
 Love in Idleness 211
 
 CONTENTS. Vll 
 
 CANTO PAOK 
 
 V. THE QUEEN'S ROOM 217 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. Rejected 217 
 
 2. Rachel 219 
 
 3. The Heart's Prophecies 220 
 
 The Queen's Room 221 
 
 71. THE LOVE-LETTERS 227 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. Love's Perversity 227 
 
 2. The Power of Love 231 
 
 The Love-Letters 232 
 
 VII. THE REVULSION 237 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 i. The Pearl 237 
 
 i. Joy and Use 239 
 
 3. " She was mine" 240 
 
 4. Rods and Kisses 241 
 
 The Revulsion 242 
 
 V III. THE KOH-I-NOOB 249 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. In Love . 249 
 
 2. Love Thinking 253 
 
 3. The Kiss 255 
 
 The Koh-i-Noor 256 
 
 IX. THE FRIENDS 261 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. The Gracious Chivalry . 261 
 
 2. The Nursling of Civility 263 
 
 3. Love Liberal 264 
 
 4. Disappointment 265 
 
 The Friends . . 266
 
 Vlll CONTENTS. 
 
 CANTO PAGE 
 
 X. THE EPITAPH 271 
 
 Preludes: 
 
 i. The Last Night at Home 271 
 
 i. Frost in Harvest 274 
 
 3. The Foreign Land 276 
 
 4. A Demonstration 277 
 
 5. Felicity 278 
 
 6. Marriage Indissoluble 279 
 
 The Epitaph 280 
 
 XI. THE WEDDING 285 
 
 Preludes : 
 
 1. Platonic Love 285 
 
 2. The Symbol 287 
 
 3. Love of Loves 288 
 
 4. Constancy rewarded 289 
 
 The Wedding 290 
 
 XII. HUSBAND AND WIFE 297 
 
 Preludes: 
 
 r. The Married Lover 297 
 
 2. The Amaranth 299 
 
 3. The Neglected Glove 300 
 
 Husband and Wife 301 
 
 THE EPILOGUE 305
 
 TEE ANGEL IN THE HOUSE. 
 
 I. 
 
 BOOK I. THE BETROTHAL. 
 
 ' Far la grace infinie, Dieu les mist au monde ensemble." 
 
 BOUSIEK DBS DAUBS.
 
 THE PROLOGUE. 
 
 " MINE is no horse with wings, to gain 
 
 " The region of the spheral chime ; 
 " He does but drag a rumbling wain, 
 
 " Cheer'd by the silver bells of rhyme ; 
 ' And if at Fame's bewitching note 
 
 " My homely Pegasus pricks an ear, 
 " The world's cart-collar hugs his throat, 
 
 " And he's too wise to kick or rear." 
 
 2. 
 
 Thus ever answer'd Yaughan his wife, 
 Who, more than he, desired his fame ; 
 
 But, in his heart, his thoughts were rife 
 How for her sake to earn a name. 
 
 B 2
 
 THE PROLOGUE. 
 
 With bays poetic three times crown'd, 
 
 And other college honours won, 
 He, if he chose, might be renown'd, 
 
 He had but little doubt, she none ; 
 And in a loftier phrase he talk'd 
 
 With her, upon their Wedding-Day, 
 (The eighth), while through the fields they walk'd, 
 
 Their children shouting by the way. 
 
 " Not careless of the gift of song, 
 
 " Nor out of love with noble fame, 
 " I, meditating much and long 
 
 " What I should sing, how win a name, 
 " Considering well what theme unsung, 
 
 " What reason worth the cost of rhyme, 
 " Remains to loose the poet's tongue 
 
 " In these last days, the dregs of time, 
 '' Learn that to me, though born so late, 
 
 " There does, beyond desert, befall
 
 THE PROLOGUE. 
 
 " (May my great fortune make me great !) 
 " The first of themes sung last of all. 
 
 " In green and undiscover'd ground, 
 " Yet near where many others sing, 
 
 ' I have the very well-head found 
 
 " Whence gushes the Pierian Spring." 
 
 Then she : " What is it, Dear ? The Life 
 
 " Of Arthur, or Jerusalem's Fall ?" 
 " Neither : your gentle self, my wife, 
 
 " And love, that grows from, one to all 
 " And if I faithfully proclaim 
 
 " Of these the exceeding worthiness, 
 ' : Surely the sweetest wreath of Fame 
 
 " Shall, to your hope, my brows caress ; 
 " And if, by virtue of my choice 
 
 " Of this, the most heart-touching theme 
 " That ever tuned a poet's voice, 
 
 " I live, as I am bold to dream,
 
 THE PKOLOGUE. 
 
 " To be delight to future days, 
 
 " And into silence only cease 
 " When those are still, who shared their bays 
 
 " With Laura and with Beatrice, 
 " Imagine, Dear, how learned men 
 
 " Will deep-conceived devices find, 
 " Beyond my purpose and my ken, 
 
 " An ancient bard of simple mind ! 
 " You, Sweet, his Mistress, Wife, and Muse, 
 
 " Were you for mortal woman meant? 
 " Your praises give a hundred clues 
 
 " To mythological intent ! 
 " And, severing thus the truth from trope, 
 
 " In you the Commentators see, 
 " Some Faith, some Charity, some Hope, 
 
 " Some, wiser, think you all the three. 
 " Your arm's on mine ! these are the meads 
 
 " In which we pass our living days ; 
 " There Avon runs, now hid with reeds, 
 
 " Now brightly brimming pebbly bays ;
 
 THE PROLOGUE. 
 
 " Those are our children's songs that come 
 
 " With bells and bleatings of the sheep ; 
 " And there, in yonder English home, 
 
 " We thrive on mortal food and sleep !" 
 She laugh' d. How proud she always was 
 
 To see how proud he was of her ! 
 But he had grown distraught, because 
 
 The Muse's mood began to stir. 
 
 His purpose with performance crown'd, 
 He, to his well-pleased wife, rehears'd, 
 
 When next their Wedding-Day came round, 
 His leisure's labour, " Book the First."
 
 CANTO I. 
 
 $103*. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 Love's Reality. 
 
 I WALK, I trust, with open eyes ; 
 
 I've travell'd half my worldly course ; 
 And in the way behind me lies 
 
 Much vanity and some remorse ; 
 I've lived to feel how pride may part 
 
 Spirits, tho' match'd like hand and glove ; 
 I've blush'd for love's abode, the heart ; 
 
 But have not disbelieved in love ; 
 Nor unto love, sole mortal thing 
 
 Of worth immortal, done the wrong
 
 10 PRELUDES. 
 
 To count it, with the rest that sing, 
 Unworthy of a serious song ; 
 
 And love is my reward ; for now, 
 
 When most of dead'ning time complain, 
 
 The myrtle blooms upon my brow, 
 Its odour quickens all my brain.
 
 PRELUDES. 1 1 
 
 IL 
 
 Love's Immortality. 
 
 How vilely 'twere to misdeserve 
 
 The poet's gift of perfect speech, 
 In song to try, with trembling nerve, 
 
 The limit of its utmost reach, 
 Only to sound the wretched praise 
 
 Of what to-morrow shall not be, 
 So mocking with immortal bays 
 
 The cross-bones of mortality ! 
 I do not thus. My faith is fast 
 
 That all the loveliness I sing 
 Is made to bear the mortal blast, 
 
 And blossom in a better Spring. 
 My creed affirms the ceaseless pact 
 
 Of body and spirit, soul and sense ; 
 Nor can my faith accept the fact, 
 
 And disavow the consequence.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 The Poet's Confidence, 
 
 THE richest realm of all the earth 
 
 i 
 
 Is counted still a heathen laud : 
 Lo, I, like Joshua, now go forth 
 
 To give it into Israel's hand. 
 I've girt myself with thought and prayer, 
 
 And am endow'd with strength, like him, 
 Beyond ray own, and will not fear 
 
 The false and foolish Anakim ; 
 Nor will I hearken blame or praise ; 
 
 For so should I dishonour do 
 To that sweet Power by which these Lays 
 
 Alone are lovely, good, and true ; 
 Nor credence to the world's cries give, 
 
 Which ever preach and still prevent 
 Pure passion's high prerogative 
 
 To make not follow precedent.
 
 PRELUDES. 1 3 
 
 IV. 
 
 The Poet's Humility. 
 
 FROM love's abysmal ether rare 
 
 If I to men have here made known 
 New truths, they, like new stars, were there. 
 
 But only not yet written down. 
 Nor verse, nor art, nor plot, nor plan, 
 
 Nor aught of mine here's worth a toy : 
 Quit praise and blame, and, if you can, 
 
 Do, brother, for the nonce, enjoy. 
 Moving but as the feelings move, 
 
 I run, or loiter with delight, 
 Or stop to mark where gentle Love 
 
 Persuades the soul from height to height. 
 Yet, know, that, though my words are gay 
 
 As David's dance, which Michal scorn' d, 
 If rightly you peruse the Lay, 
 
 You shall be sweetly help'd and warn'd.
 
 1 4 PEELUDES. 
 
 Y. 
 
 The Impossibility. 
 
 OF all the impossibilities 
 
 Of love's achieving, surely none 
 So hopeless as to speak it is. 
 
 By love, in me, may this be done ! 
 Lo, love's obey'd by all. 'Tis right 
 
 That all should know what they obey, 
 Lest erring conscience damp delight, 
 
 And folly laugh our joys away. 
 Thou Primal Love, who grantest wings 
 
 And voices to the woodland birds, 
 Grant me the power of saying things 
 
 Too simple and too sweet for words !
 
 PRELUDES. 15 
 
 VI. 
 
 Heaven and Earth. 
 
 How long shall men deny the flower 
 
 Because its roots are in the earth, 
 And crave with tears from God the dower 
 
 They have, and have despised as dearth ; 
 And scorn as low their human lot, 
 
 With frantic pride, too blind to see 
 That standing on the head makes not 
 
 Either for ease or dignity ! 
 But fools shall feel like fools to find, 
 
 (Too late inform' d,) that angels' mirth 
 Is one in cause, and mode, and kind 
 
 With that which they despised on earth.
 
 i6 
 
 THE CATHEDRAL CLOSE. 
 
 ONCE more I came to Sarum Close, 
 
 With joy half memory, half desire, 
 And breathed the sunny wind that rose 
 
 And blew the shadows o'er the Spire, 
 And toss'd the lilac's scented plumes, 
 
 And sway'd the chestnut's thousand cones, 
 And fill'd my nostrils with perfumes, 
 
 And shaped the clouds in waifs and zones, 
 And wafted down the serious strain 
 
 Of Sarum bells, when, true to time, 
 I reach'd the Dean's, with heart and brain 
 
 That trembled to the trembling chime. 
 
 2. 
 
 'Twas half my home six years ago. 
 The six years had not alter'd it :
 
 THE CATHEDRAL CLOSE, 
 
 Red-brick and ashlar, long and low, 
 
 With dormers and with oriels lit. 
 Geranium, lychnis, rose array'd 
 
 The windows, all wide open thrown ; 
 And some one in the Study play'd 
 
 The "Wedding-March of Mendelssohn. 
 And there it was I last took leave : 
 
 'Twas Christmas : I remember'd now 
 The cruel girls, who feign'd to grieve, 
 
 Took down the evergreens ; and how 
 The laurel into blazes woke 
 
 The fire, lighting the large, low room, 
 A dim, rich lustre of old oak 
 
 And crimson velvet's glowing gloom. 
 
 No change had touch'd Dean Churchill : kind, 
 By widowhood more than winters bent, 
 
 And settled in a cheerful mind, 
 
 As still forecasting heaven's content.
 
 iS THE CATHEDRAL CLOSE. 
 
 Well might his thoughts be fixed on high, 
 
 Now she was there ! Within her face 
 Humility and dignity 
 
 Were met in a most sweet embrace. 
 She seem'd expressly sent below 
 
 To teach our erring minds to see 
 The rhythmic change of time's swift flow 
 
 As part of still eternity. 
 Her life, all honour, observed, with awe 
 
 Which cross experience could not mar, 
 The fiction of the Christian law 
 
 That all men honourable are ; 
 And so her smile at once conferr'd 
 
 High flattery and benign reproof; 
 And I, a rude boy, strangely stirr'd, 
 
 Grew courtly in my own behoof. 
 The years, so far from doing her wrong, 
 
 Anointed her with gracious balm, 
 And made her brows more and more young 
 
 With wreaths of amaranth and palm.
 
 THE CATHEDRAL CLOSE. 19 
 
 4- 
 
 Was this her eldest, Honor j prude, 
 
 Who would not let me pull the swing ; 
 Who, kiss'd at Christmas, call'd me rude, 
 
 And sobb'd alone, and would not sing ? 
 How changed ! In shape no slender Grace, 
 
 But Venus ; milder than the dove ; 
 Her mother's air ; her Norman face ; 
 
 Her large sweet eyes, clear lakes of love. 
 Mary I knew. In former time 
 
 Ailing and pale, she thought that bliss 
 Was only for a better clime, 
 
 And, heavenly overmuch, scorn'd this. 
 I, rash with theories of the right, 
 
 Which stretch'd the tether of my Creed, 
 But did not break it, held delight 
 
 Half discipline. We disagreed. 
 She told the Dean I wanted grace. 
 
 Now she was kindest of the three, 
 And two wild roses deck'd her face. 
 
 And, what, was this my Mildred, she 
 
 c 2
 
 20 THE CATHEDRAL CLOSE. 
 
 To herself and all a sweet surprise ? 
 
 My Pet, who romp'd and roll'd a hoop ? 
 I wonder'd where those daisy eyes 
 
 Had found their touching curve and droop. 
 
 5- 
 
 Unmannerly times ! But now we sat 
 
 Stranger than strangers ; till I caught 
 And answer'd Mildred's smile ; and that 
 
 Spread to the rest, and freedom brought. 
 The Dean talk'd little, looking on, 
 
 Of three such daughters justly vain. 
 What letters they had had from Bonn ! 
 
 Said Mildred ; and I told again 
 How the Bonn boys besieged the house 
 
 In fury metaphysical, 
 Because I'd proved their Doctor Strausa 
 
 A myth ; and how I fought them all. 
 By Honor I was kindly task'd 
 
 To explain my never coming down
 
 THE CATHEDRAL CLOSE. 21 
 
 From Cambridge ; Mary smiled and ask'd 
 
 Were Kant and Goethe yet outgrown ? 
 And, pleased, we talk'd the old days o'er ; 
 
 And, parting, I for pleasure sigh'd. 
 To be there as a friend, (since more !) 
 
 Seem'd then, seems still, excuse for pride ; 
 For something that abode endued 
 
 With temple-like repose, an air 
 Of life's kind purposes pursued 
 
 With order'd freedom sweet and fair. 
 A tent pitch'd in a world not right 
 
 It seem'd, whose inmates, every one, 
 On tranquil faces bore the light 
 
 Of duties beautifully done, 
 And humbly, though they had few peers, 
 
 Kept their own laws, which seem'd to be 
 The fair sum of six thousand years' 
 
 Traditions of civility.
 
 CANTO II. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Paragoc. 
 
 WHEN I behold the skies aloft 
 
 Passing the pageantry of dreams, 
 The cloud whose bosom, cyguet-soft, 
 
 A couch for nuptial Juno seems, 
 The ocean broad, the mountains bright, 
 
 The shadowy vales with feeding herds, 
 I from my lyre the music smite, 
 
 Nor want for justly matching words. 
 All powers of the sea and air, 
 
 All interests of hill and plain,
 
 24 PRELUDES. 
 
 I so can sing, in seasons fair, 
 
 That who hath felt may feel again ; 
 Nay more, the gracious Muses bless 
 
 At times my tongue until I can, 
 With moving emphasis, express 
 
 The likeness of the perfect man. 
 Elated oft by such free songs, 
 
 I think with utterance free to raise 
 That hymn for which the whole world longs, 
 
 A worthy hymn in woman's praise ; 
 A hymn bright-noted like a bird's, 
 
 Arousing these song-sleepy times 
 With rhapsodies of perfect words, 
 
 Ruled by returning kiss of rhymes. 
 But when I look on her and hope 
 
 To tell with joy what I admire, 
 My thoughts lie cramp'd in narrow scope, 
 
 Or in the feeble birth expire ; 
 No skill'd complexity of speech, 
 
 No simple phrase of tenderest fall, 
 No liken'd excellence can reach 
 
 Her, the most excellent of all,
 
 PRELUDES. .25 
 
 The best half of creation's best, 
 
 Its heart to feel, its eye to see, 
 The crown and complex of the rest, 
 
 Its aim and its epitome. 
 Nay, might I utter my conceit, 
 
 'Twere after all a vulgar song, 
 For she's so simply, subtly sweet, 
 
 My deepest rapture does her wrong. 
 Yet it is now my chosen task 
 
 To sing her worth as Maid and Wife ; 
 Nor happier post than this I ask, 
 
 To live her laureate all my life. 
 On wings of love uplifted free, 
 
 And by her gentleness made great, 
 I'll teach how noble man should be 
 
 To match with such a lovely mate ; 
 And then in her will move the more 
 
 The woman's wish to be desired, 
 (By praise increased,) till both shall soar, 
 
 With blissful emulations fired. 
 And, as geranium, pink, or rose 
 
 Is thrice itself through power of art,
 
 26 PRELUDES. 
 
 So may my happy skill disclose 
 
 New fairness even in her fair heart ; 
 Until that churl shall nowhere be, 
 
 Who bends not, awed, before the throne 
 Of her affecting majesty, 
 
 So meek, so far unlike our own ; 
 Until, (for who may hope too much 
 
 From her who wields the powers of love 
 Our lifted lives at last shall touch 
 
 That happy goal to which they move ; 
 Until, we find, as darkness rolls 
 
 Away, and evil mists dissolve, 
 That nuptial contrasts are the poles 
 
 On which the heavenly spheres revolve.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 IL 
 
 The Haven. 
 
 WHENEVER I come where women are, 
 
 How sad soe'er I was before, 
 Though like a ship frost-bound and far 
 
 Withheld in ice from the ocean's roar, 
 Third-winter'd in that dreadful dock, 
 
 With stifien'd cordage, sails decay'd, 
 And crew that care for calm and shock 
 
 Alike, too dull to be dismay'd ; 
 Yet if I come where women are, 
 
 How sad soever I was before, 
 Then is my sadness banish'd far, 
 
 And I am like that ship no more; 
 Or like that ship if the ice-field splits, 
 
 Burst by the sudden polar Spring, 
 And all thank God with their warming wits, 
 
 And kiss each other and dance and sing,
 
 28 PRELUDES. 
 
 And hoist fresh sails, that make the breeze 
 Blow them along the liquid sea, 
 
 Out of the North, where life did freeze, 
 Iiito the haven where they would be.
 
 PRELUDES. 29 
 
 III. 
 
 Love and Duty. 
 
 ANNE lived so truly from above, 
 
 She look'd so radiantly good, 
 That duty bade me fall in love, 
 
 And " but for that," thought I, " I should !" 
 I worshipp'd Kate with all my will. 
 
 In idle moods you seem to see 
 A noble spirit in a hill, 
 
 A human touch about a tree.
 
 30 PRELUDES. 
 
 IV. 
 
 A Distinotion. 
 
 THE lack of lovely pride, in her 
 
 Who strives to please, my pleasure numbs, 
 And still the maid I most prefer 
 
 Whose care to please with pleasing comes.
 
 MARY AND MILDRED, 
 i. 
 
 ONE morning, after Church, I walk'd 
 
 Alone with Mary on the Lawn, 
 And felt myself, howe'er we talk'd, 
 
 To grave themes delicately drawn. 
 When she, delighted, found I knew 
 
 More of her peace than she supposed, 
 Our confidences heavenwards grew, 
 
 Like fox-glove buds, in pairs disclosed 
 Our former faults did we confess, 
 
 Our ancient feud was more than heal'd, 
 And, with the woman's eagerness 
 
 For amity full-sign'd and seal'd, 
 She, offering up for sacrifice 
 
 Her heart's reserve, brought out to show 
 Some verses, made when she was ice 
 
 To all but Heaven, six years ago ;
 
 32 MARY AND MILDRED. 
 
 Since happier grown ! I took and read 
 The neat- writ lines. She, void of guile, 
 
 Too late repenting, blush'd, and said, 
 I must not think about the style. 
 
 2. 
 
 " Day after day, until to-day, 
 " Imaged its fellows gone before, 
 
 " The same dull task, the weary way, 
 " The weakness pardon'd o'er and o'er, 
 
 " The thwarted thirst, too faintly felt, 
 " For joy's well-nigh forgotten life, 
 
 " The restless heart, which, when I knelt, 
 " Made of my worship barren strife. 
 
 " Ah, whence to-day's so sweet release ; 
 
 " This clearance light of all my care, 
 " This conscience free, this fertile peace, 
 
 " These softly folded wings of prayer
 
 MARY AND MILDRED. 33 
 
 " This calm and more than conquering love, 
 " With which the Tempter dares not cope ; 
 
 " This joy that lifts no glance above, 
 " For faith too sure, too sweet for hope ? 
 
 " 0, happy time, too happy change, 
 
 "It will uot live, though fondly nurst ! 
 
 " Full soon this Day will seem as strange 
 " As now the Dark which seems dispersed." 
 
 She from a rose-tree shook the blight ; 
 
 And well she knew that I knew well 
 Her grace with silence to requite ; 
 
 And, answering now the luncheon-bell, 
 We laugh'd at Mildred's laugh, which made 
 
 All melancholy wrong, its mood 
 Such sweet self-confidence display 'd, 
 
 So glad a sense of present good.
 
 34 MARY AND MILDRED. 
 
 We who are married, let us own 
 
 A bachelor's chief thought in life 
 Is, or the fool's not worth a groan, 
 
 To win a woman for his wife. 
 I kept the custom. I confess 
 
 I never went to Ball or Fete 
 Or Show, but in pursuit express 
 
 Of my predestinated mate ; 
 And thus to me, who had in sight 
 
 The happy chance upon the cards, 
 Each beauty blossom'd in the light 
 
 Of tender personal regards ; 
 And, in the records of my breast, 
 
 Red-lettered, eminently fair, 
 Stood sixteen, who, beyond the rest, 
 
 By turns till then had been my care 
 At Berlin three, one at St. Cloud, 
 At Chatteris, near Cambridge, one,
 
 MARY AND MILDRED. 35 
 
 At Ely four, in London two, 
 
 Two at Bowness, in Paris none, 
 And, last and best, in Sarum three; 
 
 But dearest of the whole fair troop, 
 In judgment of the moment, she 
 
 Whose daisy eyes had learn'd to droop. 
 Her very faults my fancy fired ; 
 
 My loving will, so thwarted, grew ; 
 And, bent on worship, I admired 
 
 Whate'er she was, with partial view. 
 And yet when, as to-day, her smile 
 
 Was prettiest, I could not but note 
 Honoria, less admired the while, 
 
 Was lovelier, though from love remote.
 
 37 
 
 CANTO III. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 i The Lover. 
 
 HE meets, by heavenly chance express, 
 
 The destined maid ; some hidden hand 
 Unveils to him that loveliness 
 
 Which others cannot understand. 
 No songs of love, no summer dreams 
 
 Did e'er his longing fancy fire 
 With vision like to this ; she seems 
 
 In all things better than desire ! 
 His merits iu her presence grow, 
 
 To match the pi'omise in her eyes,
 
 38 PRELUDES. 
 
 And round her happy footsteps blow 
 
 The authentic airs of Paradise. 
 > For joy of her he cannot sleep ; 
 
 Her beauty haunts him all the night ; 
 It melts his heart, it makes him weep 
 
 For wonder, worship, and delight. 
 0, paradox of love, he longs, 
 
 Most humble when he most aspires, 
 To suffer scorn and cruel wrongs 
 
 From her he honours and desires ! 
 Her graces make him rich, and ask 
 
 No guerdon ; this imperial style 
 Affronts him ; he disdains to bask, 
 
 The pensioner of her priceless smile. 
 He prays for some hard thing to do, 
 
 Some work of fame and labour immense, 
 To stretch the languid bulk and thew 
 
 Of love's fresh -born magnipotence. 
 No smallest boon were bought too dear, 
 
 Though barter'd for his love-sick life ;
 
 PRELUDES. 39 
 
 Yet trusts he, with undaunted cheer, 
 
 To vanquish heaven and call hor wife. 
 He notes how queens of sweetness still 
 
 Neglect their crowns, and stoop to mate ; 
 How, self-consign'd with lavish will, 
 
 They ask but love proportionate ; 
 How swift pursuit by small degrees, 
 
 Love's tactic, works like miracle ; 
 How valour, clothed in courtesies, 
 
 Brings down the haughtiest citadel ; 
 And therefore, though he merits not 
 
 To kiss the braid upon her skirt, 
 His hope, discouraged ne'er a jot, 
 
 Out-soars all possible desert ; 
 Resistance only makes him gay ; 
 
 The fiercer fight the fairer she ; 
 In vain her distance says him nay ; 
 
 Hope, desperate grown, feigns certainty.
 
 40 PRELUDES. 
 
 II. 
 
 U'Jie Fount of Honour. 
 
 ME to my happy hymns of praise 
 
 Not only woman's graces stir ; 
 Myself I never seem to raise 
 
 So much as when I honour her ; 
 For while my songs so various run, 
 
 There lives before my constant mind 
 An image, time-endear' d, of one 
 
 Who is to me all womankind : 
 Honoria call her : she confers 
 
 Bright honour when she breathes my name ; 
 Birth's blazon'd patents, shown with her's, 
 
 Are falsified and put to shame ; 
 The fount of honour is her smile ; 
 
 (I speak but as I feel and think,) 
 Yet pride consumes me not the while 
 
 I thence, with thirst unsated, drink ;
 
 PRELUDES. 41 
 
 For as a queen, who may not find 
 
 Her peer in all the common earth, 
 Submits her meek and royal mind, 
 
 Espousing one of subject birth, 
 All barter of like gain above, 
 
 She raised me to her noble place, 
 And made my lordship of her love 
 
 The simple gift of her free grace.
 
 42 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 The Attainment. 
 
 
 
 You love ? That's high as you shall go ; 
 
 For 'tis as true as Gospel text, 
 Not noble then is never so, 
 
 Either in this world or the next.
 
 43 
 
 HONORIA. 
 i. 
 
 GROWN weary with a week's exile 
 
 From those fair friends, I rode to see 
 The church-restorings ; lounged awhile, 
 
 And met the Dean ; was ask'd to tea, 
 And found their cousin, Frederick Graham, 
 
 At Honor's side. Was I concern'd, 
 If, when she sang, his colour came, 
 
 That mine, as with a buffet, burn'd ? 
 A man to please a girl ! thought I, 
 
 Retorting his forced smiles, the shrouds 
 Of wrath, so hid as she was by, 
 
 Sweet moon between her lighted clouds ! 
 
 2. 
 
 Whether this Cousin was the cause 
 I know not, but I seem'd to see,
 
 44 HONORIA. 
 
 The fiist time then, how fair she was, 
 
 How much the fairest of the three. 
 Each stopp'd to let the other go ; 
 
 But, time-bound, he arose the first. 
 Stay'd he in Sarum long 1 If so 
 
 I hoped to see him at the Hurst. 
 No : he had call'd here, on his way 
 
 To Portsmouth, where the Arrogant, 
 His ship, was ; he should leave next day, 
 
 For two years' cruise in the Levant. 
 
 Had love in her yet struck its germs ? 
 
 I watch'd. Her farewell shew'd me plain 
 She loved, on the majestic terms 
 
 That she should not be loved again. 
 And so her cousin, parting, felt. 
 
 Hope in his voice and eye was dead. 
 Compassion did my malice melt. 
 
 Then went I home to a listless bed.
 
 HONORIA. 45 
 
 I, who admired her too, could see 
 
 His infinite remorse at this 
 Great mystery, that she should be 
 
 So beautiful, yet not be his, 
 And, pitying, long'd to plead his part ; 
 
 But scarce could tell, so strange my whim, 
 Whether the weight upon my heart 
 
 Was sorrow for myself or him. 
 
 She was all mildness ; yet 'twas writ 
 
 Upon her beauty legibly, 
 " He that's for heaven itself unfit, 
 
 " Let him not hope to merit me." 
 And such a challenge, quite apart 
 
 From thoughts of love, humbled, and thus 
 To sweet repentance moved my heart, 
 
 And made me more magnanimous, 
 And led me to review my life, 
 
 Inquiring where in aught the least,
 
 46 HONORIA. 
 
 If question were of her for wife, 
 
 111 might be mended, hope increased. 
 Not that I soar d so far above 
 
 Myself, as this great hope to dare ; 
 And yet I well foresaw that love 
 
 Might hope where reason must despair ; 
 And, half-resenting the s-.veet pride 
 
 Which would not ask me to admire, 
 " Oh," to my secret heart I sigh'd, 
 
 " That I were worthy to desire !" 
 
 As drowsiness my brain relieved, 
 
 A shrill defiance of all to arms, 
 Shriek'd by the stable-cock, received 
 
 An angry answer from three farms. 
 And, then, I dreamt that I, her knight, 
 
 A clarion's haughty pathos heard, 
 And rode securely to the fight, 
 
 Cased in the scarf she had conferr'd ;
 
 HONOR! A. 47 
 
 And there, the bristling lists behind, 
 
 Saw many, and vanquish'd all I saw 
 Of her unnumber'd cousin-kind, 
 
 In Navy, Army, Church, and Law; 
 Smitten, the warriors somehow turii'd 
 
 To Sarum choristers, whose song, 
 Mixed with celestial sorrow, yearn'd 
 
 With joy no memory can prolong ; 
 And phantasms as absurd and sweet 
 
 Merged each in each in endless chace, 
 And everywhere I seem'd to meet 
 
 The haunting fairness of her face.
 
 49 
 
 CANTO IV. 
 
 Ijre gtorning Call. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I 
 
 The Rose of the World. 
 
 Lo, when the Lord made North and South 
 
 And sun and moon ordained, He, 
 Forthbringing each by word of mouth 
 
 In order of its dignity, 
 Did man from the crude clay express 
 
 By sequence, and, all else decreed, 
 He forni'd the woman ; nor might less 
 
 Than Sabbath such a work succeed. 
 And still with favour singled out, 
 
 Marr'd less than man by mortal fall, 
 
 E
 
 50 PRELUDES. 
 
 Her disposition is devout, 
 
 Her countenance angelical ; 
 The best things that the best believe 
 
 Are in her face so kindly writ 
 The faithless, seeing her, conceive, 
 
 Not only heaven, but hope of it ; 
 No idle thought her instinct shrouds, 
 
 But fancy chequers settled sense, 
 Like alteration of the clouds 
 
 On noonday's azure permanence ; 
 Pure dignity, composure, ease, 
 
 Declare affections nobly fix'd, 
 And impulse sprung from due degrees 
 
 Of sense and spirit sweetly mix'd ; 
 Her modesty, her chiefest grace, 
 
 The cestus clasping Venus' side, 
 Is potent to deject the face 
 
 Of him who would affront its pride ; 
 Wrong dares not in her presence speak, 
 
 Nor spotted thought its taint disclose 
 Under the protest of a cheek 
 
 Outbraggirig Nature's boast the rose.
 
 PRELUDES. 5 1 
 
 In mind and manners how discreet ! 
 
 How artless in her very art ; 
 How candid in discourse ; how sweet 
 
 The concord of her lips and heart ; 
 How simple and how circumspect ; 
 
 How subtle and how fancy-free : 
 Though sacred to her love, how deck'd 
 
 With unexclusive courtesy; 
 How quick in talk to see from far 
 
 The way to vanquish or evade ; 
 How able her persuasions are 
 
 To prove, her reasons to persuade ; 
 How, (not to call true instinct's bent 
 
 And woman's very nature, harm,) 
 How amiable and innocent 
 
 Her pleasure in her power to charm ; 
 How humbly careful to attract, 
 
 Though crown'd with all the soul desires, 
 Connubial aptitude exact, 
 
 Diversity that never tires. 
 
 E 2
 
 52 PRELUDES. 
 
 II. 
 
 The Tribute. 
 
 BOON Nature to the woman bows. 
 
 She walks in all its glory clad, 
 And, chief herself of earthly shows, 
 
 Each other helps her, and is glad, 
 No splendour 'neath the sky's proud dome 
 
 But serves for her familiar wear; 
 The far-fetch'd diamond finds its home 
 
 Flashing and smouldering in her hair ; 
 For her the seas their pearls reveal ; 
 
 Art and strange lands her pomp supply 
 With purple, chrome, and cochineal, 
 
 Ochre, and lapis lazuli ; 
 The worm its golden woof presents ; 
 
 Whatever mns, flies, dives, or delves, 
 All doff for her their ornaments, 
 
 Which suit her better than themselves ;
 
 PRELUDES. 53 
 
 And all, by this their power to give, 
 Proving her right to take, proclaim 
 
 Her beauty's clear prerogative 
 To profit so by Eden's blame.
 
 54 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 Compensation. 
 
 THAT nothing here may want its praise, 
 
 iKnow, she who in her dress reveals 
 A fine and modest taste, displays 
 More loveliness than she conceals.
 
 55 
 
 THE MORNING CALL. 
 
 i. 
 ' BY meekness charm' d, or proud to allow 
 
 " A queenly claim to live admired, 
 ' Full many a lady has ere now 
 
 " My apprehensive fancy fired, 
 " And woven many a transient chain ; 
 
 " But never lady like to this, 
 ' Who holds me as the weather-vane 
 
 " Is held by yonder clematis. 
 ' She seems the life of nature's powers ; 
 
 " Her beauty is the genial thought 
 " Which makes the sunshine bright ; the flowers, 
 
 " But for their hint of her, were nought." 
 
 2. 
 
 A voice, the sweeter for the grace 
 Of suddenness, while thus I dream'd,
 
 56 THE MORNING CALL. 
 
 " Good morning !" said or sang. Her face 
 
 The mirror of the morning seem'd. 
 Her sisters in the garden walk'd, 
 
 And would I come 1 Across the Hall 
 She took me ; and we laugh'd and talk'd 
 
 About the Flower-show and the Ball. 
 Their pinks had won a spade for prize ; 
 
 But this was gallantly withdrawn 
 For ' Jones on Wiltshire Butterflies !' 
 
 Allusive ! So we paced the lawn, 
 Close-cut, and with geranium-plots, 
 
 A rival glow of green and red ; 
 Then counted sixty apricots 
 
 On one small tree ; the gold-fish fed ; 
 And watch'd where, black with scarlet tans, 
 
 Proud Psyche stood and flash'd like flame, 
 Showing and shutting splendid fans ; 
 
 And in the prize we found its name. 
 
 3- 
 
 The sweet hour lapsed, and left my breast 
 A load of joy and tender care ;
 
 THE MORNING CALL. 57 
 
 And this delight, which life oppress'd, 
 
 To fix'd aims grew, that ask'd for pray'r. 
 I rode home slowly ; whip-in-hand 
 
 And soil'd bank-notes all ready, stood 
 The Farmer who farm'd all my land, 
 
 Except the little Park and Wood ; 
 And, with the accustomed compliment 
 
 Of talk, and beef, and frothing beer, 
 I, my own steward, took my rent, 
 
 Three hundred pounds for half the year ; 
 Our witnesses the Maid and Groom, 
 
 We sign'd the lease for seven years more, 
 And bade Good-day ; then to my room 
 
 I went, and closed and lock'd the door, 
 And cast myself down on my bed, 
 
 And there, with many a blissful tear, 
 I vow'd to love and pray'd to wed 
 
 The maiden who had grown so dear ; 
 Thank'd God who had set her in my path ; 
 
 And promised, as I hoped to win, 
 I never would sully my faith 
 
 By the least selfishness or sin ;
 
 58 THE MORNING CALL. 
 
 Whatever in her sight I'd seem 
 
 I'd really be ; I'd never blend 
 With my delight in her a dream 
 
 'Twould change her cheek to comprehend ; 
 And, if she wish'd it, I'd prefer 
 
 Another's to my own success ; 
 And always seek the best for her, 
 
 With unofficious tenderness. 
 
 4- 
 .Rising, I breathed a brighter clime, 
 
 And found myself all self above, 
 And, with a charity sublime, 
 
 Contemn'd not those who did not love ; 
 And I could not but feel that then 
 
 I shone with something of her grace, 
 And went forth to my fellow men 
 
 My commendation in my face.
 
 59 
 
 CANTO V. 
 
 Swlets. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Parallel. 
 
 I KNOW not how to her it seems, 
 
 Or how to a perfect judging eye, 
 But, as my loving thought esteems, 
 
 Man misdeserves his sweet ally. 
 Where she succeeds with cloudless brow, 
 
 In common and in holy course, 
 He fails, in spite of prayer and vow 
 
 And agonies of faith and force ; 
 Or, if his suit with Heaven prevails 
 
 To righteous life, his virtuous deeds
 
 60 PBELUDES. 
 
 Lack beauty, virtue's badge ; she fails 
 
 More graciously than he succeeds. 
 Her spirit, compact of gentleness, 
 
 If Heaven postpones or grants her prayer, 
 Conceives no pride in its success, 
 
 And in its failure no despair ; 
 But his, enamour' d of its hurt, 
 
 Baffled, blasphemes, or, not denied, 
 Crows from the dunghill of desert, 
 
 And wags its ugly wings for pride. 
 He's never young nor ripe ; she grows 
 
 More infantine, auroral, mild, 
 And still the more she lives and knows 
 
 The lovelier she's express'd a child. 
 Say that she wants the will of man 
 
 To conquer fame, not check'd by cross, 
 Nor moved when others bless or ban ; 
 
 She wants but what to have were loss. 
 Or say she holds no seals of power, 
 
 But humbly lives her life at school ;
 
 PRELUDES. 6 1 
 
 Alas, we have yet to hail the hour 
 
 When God shall clothe the best with rule. 
 Or say she wants the patient brain 
 
 To track shy truth ; her facile wit 
 At that which he hunts down with pain 
 
 Flies straight, and does exactly hit. 
 Were she but half of what she is, 
 
 He twice himself, mere love alone, 
 Her special crown, as truth is his, 
 
 Gives title to the loftier throne ; 
 For love is substance, truth the form ; 
 
 Truth without love were less than nought ; 
 But blindest love is sweet and warm, 
 
 And full of truth not shaped by thought ; 
 And therefore in herself she stands 
 
 Adorn'd with undeficient grace, 
 Her happy virtues taking hands, 
 
 Each smiling in another's face 
 So, dancing round the Tree of Life, 
 
 They make an Eden in her breast,
 
 62 PRELUDES. 
 
 While his, disjointed and at strife, 
 
 Proud-thoughted, do not bring him rest. 
 But ever groan and gasp for dearth 
 
 Of that in her with which they agree, 
 Like rude base notes, of little worth 
 
 Till married to their melody. 
 Her privilege, not impotence, 
 
 Exempts her from the work of man : 
 Humbling his proper excellence, 
 
 Jean d'Arc led war's obstreperous van. 
 No post of policy or pride 
 
 Does Heaven from her holding grudge ; 
 Miriam and Anna prophesied, 
 
 In Israel Deborah was judge. 
 How many Christian heroines 
 
 Have blest the world, and still do bless ! 
 The praise their equal courage wins 
 
 Is tenfold through their tenderness ; 
 And, ah, sad times gone by, denied 
 
 The joy fullest omen ever seen,
 
 PRELUDES. 63 
 
 The full-grown Lion's power and pride 
 
 Led by the soft hand of a Queen ! 
 Yet, lest my tender-thoughted strain 
 
 Should seem to doubt the right decree 
 Of Him who made the human twain 
 
 Conjoin'd in this disparity, 
 My Song declai-es what heavenly art 
 
 Completes her wealth with his defect, 
 And, in love's high exacting mart, 
 
 Pays poor desert with rich respect ; 
 And makes this much unequal pair 
 
 Well-match'd in all that love requires, 
 If she's incomparably fair, 
 
 And he but worthily admires.
 
 64 PRELUDES. 
 
 II. 
 
 Love in Tears. 
 
 IF fate Love's dear ambition mar, 
 
 And load his breast with hopeless pain, 
 And seem to blot out sun and star, 
 
 Love, lost or won, is countless gain ; 
 His sorrow boasts a secret bliss 
 
 Which sorrow of itself beguiles, 
 And Love in tears too noble h 
 
 For pity, save of Love in smiles. 
 But looking backward through his tears, 
 
 With vision of maturer scope, 
 How often one dead joy appears 
 
 The platform of some better hope ! 
 And, let us own, the sharpest smart 
 
 Which human patience may endure 
 Pays light for that which leaves the heart 
 
 More generous, dignified, and pure.
 
 PRELUDES. 65 
 
 IIL 
 
 Prospective Faith. 
 
 THEY safely walk in darkest ways 
 
 Whose youth is lighted from above, 
 Where, through the senses' silvery haze, 
 
 Dawns the veil'd moon of nuptial love. 
 Who is the happy husband ? He 
 
 Who, scanning his unwedded life, 
 Thanks Heaven, with a conscience free, 
 
 'Twas faithful to his future wife.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 IV. 
 
 Venue Victrix. 
 
 FATAL in force, yet gentle in will, 
 Defeats, from her, are tender pacts, 
 
 For, like the kindly lodestone, still 
 
 She's drawn herself by what she attracts.
 
 THE VIOLETS, 
 i. 
 
 I WENT not to the Dean's unbid, 
 
 For I'd not have my mystery, 
 From her so delicately hid, 
 
 Discuss'd by gossips at their tea. 
 A long, long week, and not once there, 
 
 Had made my spirit sick and faint, 
 And lack-love, foul as love is fair, 
 
 Perverted all things to complaint. 
 How vain the world had grown to be ! 
 
 How mean all people and their ways, 
 How ignorant their sympathy, 
 
 And how impertinent their praise ; 
 What they for virtuousness esteem'd, 
 
 How far removed from heavenly right ; 
 
 T 2
 
 68 THE VIOLETS. 
 
 What pettiness their trouble seem'd, 
 
 How undelightful their delight ; 
 To my necessity how strange 
 
 The sunshine and the song of birds ; 
 How dull the clouds' continual change, 
 
 How foolishly content the herds ; 
 How unaccountable the law 
 
 Which bade me sit in blindness here, 
 While she, the sun by which I saw, 
 
 Shed splendour in an idle sphere ! 
 And then I kiss'd her stolen glove, 
 
 And sigh'd to reckon and define 
 The modes of martyrdom in love, 
 
 And how far each one might be mine. 
 I thought how love, whose vast estate 
 
 Is earth and air and sun and sea, 
 Encounters oft the beggar's fate, 
 
 Despised on score of poverty ; 
 How Heaven, inscrutable in this, 
 
 Lets the gross general make or mar
 
 THE VIOLETS. 69 
 
 The destiny of love, which is 
 
 So tender and particular ; 
 How nature, as unnatural 
 
 And contradicting nature's source, 
 Which is but love, seems most of all 
 
 Well-pleased to harry true love's course ; 
 How, many times, it comes to pass 
 
 That trifling shades of temperament, 
 Affecting only one, alas, 
 
 Not love, but love's success prevent ; 
 How manners often falsely paint 
 
 The man ; how passionate respect, 
 Hid by itself, may bear the taint 
 
 Of coldness and a dull neglect ; 
 And how a little outward dust 
 
 Can a clear merit quite o'ercloud, 
 And make her fatally unjust, 
 
 And him desire a darker shroud ; 
 How senseless opportunity 
 
 Gives baser men the better chance ;
 
 70 THE VIOLETS. 
 
 How powers, adverse else, agree 
 
 To cheat her in her ignorance ; 
 How Providence itself conspires 
 
 With man and nature against love, 
 As pleased to couple cross desires, 
 
 And cross where they themselves approve. 
 Wretched were life, if the end were now ! 
 
 But this gives tears to dry despair, 
 Faith shall be blest, we know not how, 
 
 And love fulfill'd, we know not where. 
 
 2. 
 
 While thus I grieved, and kiss'd her glove, 
 
 My man brought in her note to say, 
 Papa had bid her send his love, 
 
 And would I dine with them next day 1 
 They had learn'd and practised Purcell's glee, 
 
 To sing it by to-morrow night. 
 The Postscript was : Her sisters and she 
 
 Inclosed some violets, blue and white ;
 
 THE VIOLETS. 7 1 
 
 She and her sisters found them where 
 
 I wager'd once no violets grew ; 
 So they had won the gloves. And there 
 
 The violets lay, two white, one blue.
 
 73 
 
 CANTO VI. 
 
 f i* geatt. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 Perfect Love rare. 
 
 MOST rare is still most noble found, 
 
 Most noble still most incomplete ; 
 Sad law, which leaves King Love uncrown'd 
 
 In this obscure, terrestrial seat ! 
 With bale more sweet than others' bliss, 
 
 And bliss more wise than others' bale, 
 The secrets of the world are his, 
 
 And freedom without let or pale. 
 0, zealous good, 0, virtuous glee, 
 
 Religious, anl without alloy,
 
 74 PRELUDES. 
 
 O, privilege high, which none but he 
 
 Who highly merits can enjoy ; 
 O, Love, who art that fabled sun 
 
 Which all the world with bounty loads, 
 Without respect of realms, save one, 
 
 And gilds with double lustre Rhodes ; 
 A day of whose delicious life, 
 
 Though full of terrors, full of tears, 
 Is better than of other life 
 
 A hundred thousand million years ; 
 Thy heavenly splendour magnifies 
 
 The least commixture of earth's mould, 
 Cheapens thyself in thine own eyes, 
 
 And makes the foolish mocker bold.
 
 PRELUDES. 75 
 
 II. 
 
 Love Justified. 
 
 WHAT if my pole-star of respect 
 
 Be dim to others, shall their "Nay," 
 Presumably their own defect, 
 
 Invalidate my heart's strong " Yea ?" 
 And can they rightly me condemn, 
 
 If I, with partial love, prefer ? 
 I am not more unjust to them, 
 
 But only not unjust to her. 
 Leave us alone ! After awhile, 
 
 This pool of private charity 
 Shall make its continent an isle, 
 
 And roll, a world-embracing sea ; 
 This foolish zeal of lip for lip, 
 
 This fond, self-sanctioned, wilful zest, 
 Is that elect relationship 
 
 Which forms and sanctions all the rest ;
 
 76 PRELUDES. 
 
 This little germ of nuptial love, 
 
 Which springs so simply from the sod, 
 
 The root is, as my song shall prove, 
 Of all our love to man and God.
 
 PRELUDES. 77 
 
 III. 
 
 Love Serviceable. 
 
 WHAT measure Fate to him shall mete 
 
 Is not the noble Lover's carej 
 He's heart-sick with a longing sweet 
 
 To make her happy as she's fair. 
 O, horror, should she him refuse, 
 
 And so her dearest good mistake ! 
 His own success he thus pursues 
 
 With frantic zeal for her sole sake. 
 To lose her were his life to blight, 
 
 Being loss to hers ; to make her his, 
 Except as helping her delight, 
 
 He calls but incidental bliss ; 
 And, holding life as so much pelf 
 
 To buy her posies, learns this lore : 
 He does not rightly love himself 
 
 Who does not love another more.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 IV. 
 
 . Love a Virtue. 
 
 STRONG passions mean weak will, and he 
 
 Who truly knows the strength and bliss 
 Which are in love, will own with me 
 
 No passion but a virtue 'tis. 
 Few hear my word ; it soars above 
 
 The subtlest senses of the swarm 
 Of wretched things which know not love, 
 
 Their Psyche still a wingless worm. 
 Ice-cold strikes heaven's noble glow 
 
 To spirits whose vital heat is hell ; 
 And to corrupt hearts even so 
 
 The songs I sing, the tale I tell. 
 These cannot see the robes of white 
 
 In which I sing of love. Alack, 
 But darkness shows in heavenly light, 
 
 Though whiteness, in the dark, is black !
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 V. 
 
 A Riddle Solved. 
 
 KIND souls, you wonder why, love you, 
 When you, you wonder why, love none. 
 
 We love, Sir, for the good we do, 
 Not that which unto us is done. 
 
 79
 
 8o 
 
 THE DEAN, 
 i. 
 
 THE Ladies rose. I held the door, 
 
 And sigh'd, as her departing grace 
 Assured me that she always wore 
 
 A heart as happy as her face ; 
 And, jealous of the winds that blew, 
 
 I dreaded, o'er the tasteless wine, 
 What fortune momently might do 
 
 To hurt the hope that she'd be mine. 
 
 2. 
 
 Towards my mark the Dean's talk set 
 He praised my " Notes on Abury," 
 
 Read when the Association met 
 At Sarum ; he was glad to see
 
 THE DEAN. 8 1 
 
 I had not stopp'd, as some men had, 
 At Wrangler and Prize Poet ; last, 
 
 He hoped the business was not bad 
 I came about : then the wine pass'd. 
 
 A full glass prefaced my reply : 
 
 I loved his daughter, Honor ; he knew 
 My estate and prospects ; might I try 
 
 To win her ? To mine eyes tears flew. 
 He thought 'twas that. I might. He gave 
 
 His true consent, if I could get 
 Her love. A dear, good Girl ! she'd have 
 
 Only three thousand pounds as yet ; 
 More bye and bye. Yes, his good will 
 
 Should go with me ; he would not stir ; 
 He and my father in old time still 
 
 Wish'd I should one day marry her ; 
 But God so seldom lets us take 
 
 Our chosen pathway, when it lies
 
 82 THE DEAN. 
 
 In steps that either mar or make 
 
 Or alter others' destinies, 
 That, though his blessing and his prayer 
 
 Had help'd, should help, my suit, yet he 
 Left all to me, his passive share 
 
 Consent and opportunity. 
 My chance, he hoped, was good : I'd won 
 
 Some name already; friends and place 
 Appear'd within my reach, but none 
 
 Her mind and manners would not grace. 
 Girls love to see the men in whom 
 
 They invest their vanities admired ; 
 Besides, where goodness is, there room 
 
 For good to work will be desired. 
 'Twas so with one now past away ; 
 
 And what she was at twenty-two, 
 Honor was now ; and he might say 
 
 Mine was a choice I could not rue. 
 
 4- 
 He ceased, and gave his hand. He had won, 
 
 (And all my heart was in my word),
 
 THE DEAN. 
 
 3 
 
 From me the affection of a son, 
 
 Whichever fortune Heaven conferr'd 1 
 "Well, well, would I take more wine ? Then go 
 
 To her ; she makes tea on the Lawn 
 These fine warm afternoons. And so 
 
 We went whither my soul was drawn ; 
 And her light-hearted ignorance 
 
 Of interest in our discourse 
 Fill'd me with love, and seem'd to enhance 
 
 Her beauty with pathetic force, 
 As, through the flowery mazes sweet, 
 
 Fronting the wind that flutter'd blythe, 
 And loved her shape, and kiss'd her feet, 
 
 Shewn to their insteps proud and lithe, 
 She approach'd, all mildness and young trust ; 
 
 And ever her chaste and noble air 
 Gave to love's feast its choicest gust, 
 
 A vague, faint augury of despair. 
 
 G 2
 
 CANTO VII. 
 
 du an& tjj* Item. 
 
 PEELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Prodigal, 
 
 To heroism and holiness 
 
 How hard it is for man to soar, 
 But how much harder to be less 
 
 Than what his mistress loves him for ! 
 There is no man so full of pride, 
 
 And none so intimate with shame, 
 And none to manhood so denied, 
 
 As not to mend if women blame. 
 He does with ease what do he must, 
 
 Or merit this, and nought's debarr'd
 
 86 PRELUDES. 
 
 From man, when woman shall be just 
 
 In yielding her desired regard. 
 Ah, wasteful woman, she who may 
 
 On her sweet self set her own price, 
 Knowing he cannot choose but pay, 
 
 How has she cheapen'd paradise ; 
 How given for nought her priceless gift, 
 
 How spoil'd the bread and spill'd the wine, 
 Which, spent with due, respective thrift, 
 
 Had made brutes men, and men divine.
 
 PRELUDES. 87 
 
 II. 
 
 The Preacher taught. 
 
 " HER fairness is but painted flesh ; 
 
 Read here ; immortal beauty drink ! " 
 " For that my tears flow still afresh ; 
 
 But what's this ? Rags and Printers' ink ! " 
 " Fix eyes on Heaven !" " My grateful sight 
 
 Adores the Sun's reflected power, 
 And loves acceptably the Light 
 
 Loving its colours in the flower." 
 " In love keep bounds ! " " More sense befall 
 
 Thy sanctity, and make it less ! 
 Be sure I will not love at all 
 
 Where all my love would be excess."
 
 88 PBELUDES. 
 
 TIL 
 
 " For ever." 
 
 DOUBTS of eternity ne'er cross 
 
 The Lover's faith, divinely clear ; 
 For ever is the gain or loss 
 
 Which maddens him with hope or fear ; 
 So trifles serve for his relief, 
 
 And trifles make him sick and pale; 
 And yet his pleasure and his grief 
 
 Are both on a majestic scale. 
 The chance, indefinitely small, 
 
 Of issue infinitely great, 
 Eclipses finite interests all, 
 
 And has the dignity of fate.
 
 PRELUDES. 89 
 
 IV. 
 
 The Metamorphosis. 
 
 MAID, choosing man, remember this : 
 You take his nature with his name. 
 
 Ask, too, what his religion is, 
 
 For you will soon be of the same.
 
 9 o 
 
 AND THE MOON. 
 
 i. 
 
 To ease my heart, I, feigning, seized 
 
 A pen, and, showering tears, declared 
 My unfeign'd passion ; sadly pleased 
 
 Only to dream that so I dared. 
 Thus was the fervid truth confess'd, 
 
 But wild with paradox ran the plea, 
 As wilfully in hope depress'd, 
 
 Yet bold beyond hope's warranty : 
 
 2. 
 
 "0, more than dear, be more than just, 
 " And do not deafly shut the door !
 
 -ETNA AND THE MOON. 9! 
 
 " I claim no right to speak j I trust 
 
 " Mercy, not right ; yet who has more ? 
 " For, if more love makes not more fit, 
 
 " Of claimants here none's more nor less, 
 " Since your great worth does not permit 
 
 " Degrees in our unworthiness. 
 " Yet, if there's aught that can be done 
 
 " With arduous labour of long years, 
 " By which you'll say that you'll be won, 
 
 " O tell me, and I'll dry my tears. 
 " Ah, no ; if loving cannot move, 
 
 " How foolishly must labour fail ! 
 " The use of deeds is to show love ; 
 
 " If signs suffice let these avail : 
 " Your name pronounced brings to my heart 
 
 " A feeling like the violet's breath, 
 "Which does so much of heaven impart 
 
 " It makes me yearn with tears for death ; 
 " The winds that in the garden toss 
 
 " The Guelder-roses give me pain,
 
 AND THE MOON. 
 
 " Alarm me with the dread of loss, 
 
 " Exhaust me with the dream of gain ; 
 " I'm troubled by the clouds that move ; 
 
 " Thrill'd by the breath which I respire ; 
 " And ever, like a torch, my love, 
 
 " Thus agitated, flames the higher ; 
 " All's hard that has not you for goal ; 
 
 " I scarce can move my hand to write, 
 " For love engages all my soul, 
 
 "And leaves the body void of might ; 
 " The wings of will spread idly as do 
 
 " The bird's that in a vacuum lies j 
 " My breast, asleep with dreams of you, 
 
 " Forgets to breathe, and bursts in sighs ; 
 " I see no rest this side the grave, 
 
 " No rest or hope from you apart ; 
 " Your life is in the rose you gave, 
 
 " Its perfume suffocates my heart ; 
 " There's no refreshment in the breeze ; 
 
 " The heaven o'erwhelms me with its blue ;
 
 jETNA AND THE MOON. 93 
 
 " I faint beside the dancing seas ; 
 
 " Winds, skies, and waves are only you ; 
 " The thought or act which not intends 
 
 " You service, seems a sin and shame ; 
 "In that one only object ends 
 
 " Conscience, religion, honour, fame. 
 " Yet think not, Dear, that, thus engaged, 
 
 " These drop their heavenly function ; no, 
 " They simply bow where Heaven's presaged 
 
 " In semblance of the liveliest show. 
 " Ah, could I put off love ! Gould we 
 
 " Never have met ! What calm, what ease 
 " Nay, but, alas, this remedy 
 
 " Were ten times worse than the disease ; 
 " For when, indifferent, I pursue 
 
 " The world's best pleasures for relief, 
 " My heart, still sickening back to you, 
 
 " Finds none like memoiy of its grief ; 
 " And, though 'twere very hell to hear 
 
 " You felt such misery as I,
 
 94 .ETNA AND THE MOON. 
 
 " All good, save you, were far less dear 
 " Than is that ill with which I die ! 
 
 " Where'er I go, wandering forlorn, 
 
 " You are the world's love, life, and glee : 
 
 " O, wretchedness not to be borne 
 
 " If she that's Love should not love me !' 
 
 I could not write another word, 
 
 Through pity for my own distress ; 
 And forth I went, untimely stirr'd 
 
 To make my misery more or less. 
 I went, beneath the heated noon, 
 
 To where, in her simplicity, 
 She sat at work ; and, as the Moon 
 
 On ^Etna smiles, she smiled on me; 
 But, now and then, in cheek and eyes, 
 
 I saw, or fancied, such a glow 
 As when, in summer-evening skies, 
 
 Some say " It lightens," some say " No."
 
 jETNA AND THE MOON. $5 
 
 " Honoria," I began No more. 
 
 The Dean, by ill or happy hap, 
 Came home ; and Wolf burst in before, 
 
 And put his nose iipon her lap.
 
 97 
 
 CANTO VIII. 
 
 Saturn flam. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 I. 
 
 Life of Life. 
 
 WHAT'S that, which, ere I spake, was gone ! 
 
 So joyful and intense a spark 
 That, whilst o'erhead the wonder shone, 
 
 The day, before but dull, grew dark ? 
 I do not know ; but this I know, 
 
 That, had the splendour lived a year, 
 The truth that I some heavenly show 
 
 Did see, could not be now more clear. 
 This know I too : might mortal breath 
 
 Express the passion then inspired,
 
 9 8 PRELUDES. 
 
 Evil would die a natural death, 
 And nothing transient be desired ; 
 
 And error from the soul would pass, 
 And leave the senses pure and strong 
 
 As sunbeams. But the best, alas, 
 Has neither memory nor tongue.
 
 PRELUDES. 99 
 
 II. 
 
 The Revelation. 
 
 AN idle poet, here and there, 
 
 Looks round him, but, for all the rest, 
 The world, unfathomably fair, 
 
 Is duller than a witling's jest. 
 Love wakes men, once a life-time each j 
 
 They lift their heavy lids, and look ; 
 And, lo, what one sweet page can teach 
 
 They read with joy, then shut the book 
 And some give thanks, and some blaspheme, 
 
 And most forget ; but, either way, 
 That and the Child's unheeded dream 
 
 Is all the light of all their day. 
 
 M 2
 
 100 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 The Spirit's Epochs. 
 
 NOT in the crises of events, 
 
 Of compass'd hopes, or fears fulfill'd, 
 Or acts of gravest consequence, 
 
 Are life's delight and depth reveal'd. 
 The day of days was not the day ; 
 
 That went before, or was postponed ; 
 The night Death took our lamp away 
 
 Was not the night on which we groan'd. 
 I drew my bride, beneath the moon, 
 
 Across my threshold ; happy hour ! 
 But, ah, the walk that afternoon 
 
 We saw the water-flags in flower 1
 
 PRELUDES. 1 01 
 
 IY. 
 
 The Prototype. 
 
 Lo, there, whence love, life, light are pour'd, 
 
 Veil'd with impenetrable rays, 
 Amidst the presence of the Lord 
 
 Co-equal Wisdom laughs and plays. 
 Female and male God made the man ; 
 
 His image is the whole, not half ; 
 And in our love we dimly scan 
 
 The love which is between Himself.
 
 102 PRELUDES. 
 
 V. 
 
 The Praise of Love. 
 
 SPIRIT of Knowledge, grant me this : 
 A simple heart and subtle wit 
 
 To praise the thing whose praise it is 
 That all which can be praised is it.
 
 103 
 
 SARUM PLAIN. 
 
 i. 
 
 BRIEF worship done, which still endows 
 
 The day with beauty not its own ; 
 Breakfast enjoy'd, 'mid hush of boughs 
 
 And perfumes thro' the windows blown ; 
 With intervening pause, that paints 
 
 Each act with honour, life with calm, 
 (As old processions of the Saints 
 
 At every step have wands of palm), 
 We rose ; the ladies went to dress, 
 
 And soon return'd with smiles ; and then, 
 Plans fix'd, to which the Dean said Yes, 
 
 Once more we drove to Salisbury Plain. 
 We past my house, (observed with praise 
 
 By Mildred, Mary acquiesced), 
 And left the old and lazy greys 
 
 Below the hill, and walk'd the rest.
 
 104 SARUM PLAIN. 
 
 f\ 
 
 The moods of love are like the wind, 
 
 And none knows whence or why they rise, 
 I ne'er before felt heart and mind 
 
 So much affected through mine eyes. 
 How cognate with the flatter'd air, 
 
 How form'd for eai*th's familiar zone, 
 She moved ; how feeling and how fair 
 
 For other's pleasure and her own ; 
 And, ah, the heaven of her face ! 
 
 How, when she laugh' d, I seem'd to see 
 The gladness of the primal grace, 
 
 And how, when grave, its dignity ! 
 Of all she was, the least not less 
 
 Delighted the devoted eye ; 
 No fold or fashion of her dress 
 
 Her fairness did not sanctify ; 
 Better it seem'd as now to walk, 
 
 And humbly by her gentle side 
 Observe her smile and hear her talk, 
 
 Then call the world's next best my bride.
 
 SARUM PLAIN. 105 
 
 I could not else than grieve. What cause? 
 
 Was I not blest ? Was she not theje 1 
 Likely my own 1 Ah, that it was : 
 
 How like seem'd ' likely' to despair ? 
 
 And yet to see her so benign, 
 
 So honourable and womanly, 
 In every maiden kindness mine, 
 
 And full of gayest courtesy, 
 Was pleasure so without alloy, 
 
 Such unreproved, sufficient bliss, 
 I almost wish'd, the while, that joy 
 
 Might never further go than this. 
 I feign'd her won : the mind finite, 
 
 Puzzled and fagg'd by stress and strain 
 To comprehend the whole delight, 
 
 Made bliss more hard to bear than pain 
 All good, save heart to hold, so summ'd 
 
 And grasp' d, it smote me like a knife
 
 106 SABUM PLAIN. 
 
 The Fall had narrow'd, dull'd and numb'd 
 
 The feelings to the feast of life ; 
 Whence passing good breathes sweetest breath ; 
 
 And love itself at highest reveals 
 More black than bright, commending death 
 
 By teaching how much life conceals. 
 
 But happier passions these subdued, 
 
 When from the close and sultry lane, 
 With eyes made bright by what they view'd, 
 
 We emerged upon the mounded Plain. 
 As to the breeze a flag unfurls 
 
 My spirit expanded, sweetly embraced 
 By those same gusts that shook her curls 
 
 And vex'd the ribbon at her waist. 
 To the future cast I future cares ; 
 
 Breathed with a heart unfreighted, free, 
 And laugh'd at the presumptuous airs 
 
 That with her muslins folded me ;
 
 SARUM PLAIN. 107 
 
 Till, one vague rack along my sky, 
 
 The thought that she might ne'er be mine 
 
 Lay half forgotten by the eye 
 
 So feasted with the sun's warm shine. 
 
 By the great stones we chose our ground 
 
 For shade ; and there, in converse sweet, 
 Took luncheon. On a little mound 
 
 Sat the three ladies ; at their feet, 
 I sat ; and smelt the heathy smell, 
 
 Pluck* d hare-bells, turn'd the telescope 
 To the country round. My life went well, 
 
 For once, without the wheels of hope ; 
 And I despised the Druid rocks 
 
 That scovrl'd their chill gloom from above, 
 Like churls whose stolid wisdom mocks 
 
 The lightness of immortal love. 
 And, as we talk'd, my spirit quafFd 
 
 The sparkling winds ; the candid skies
 
 108 SAEUM PLAIN. 
 
 At our untruthful strangeness laugh'd ; 
 
 I kiss'd with mine her smiling eyes ; 
 And sweet familiarness and awe 
 
 Prevail'd that hour on either part, 
 And in the eternal light I saw 
 
 That she was mine ; though yet my heart 
 Could not conceive, nor would confess 
 
 Such contentation ; and there grew 
 More form and more fair stateliness 
 
 Than heretofore, between us two.
 
 CANTO IX. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Wife's Tragedy. 
 
 MAN must be pleased j but him to please 
 
 Is woman's pleasure ; down the gulf 
 Of his condoled necessities 
 
 She casts her best, she flings herself. 
 How often flings for nought ! and yokes 
 
 Her heart to an icicle or whim, 
 Whose each impatient word provokes 
 
 Another, not from her, but him ; 
 While she, too gentle even to force 
 
 His penitence by kind replies,
 
 110 PRELUDES. 
 
 Waits by, expecting his remorse, 
 
 With pardon in her pitying eyes ; 
 And if he once, by shame oppress'd, 
 
 A comfortable word confers, 
 She leans and weeps against his breast, 
 
 And seems to think the sin was hers ; 
 And whilst his love has any life, 
 
 Or any eye to see her charms, 
 At any time, she's still his wife, 
 
 Dearly devoted to his arms ; 
 She loves with love that cannot tire ; 
 
 And when, ah woe, she loves alone, 
 Through passionate duty love flames higher, 
 
 As grass grows taller round a stone.
 
 PRELUDES. Ill 
 
 II. 
 
 Common Graces. 
 
 MAN, (and Legion is thy name,) 
 
 Who hadst for dowry with thy wife 
 A conduct void of outward blame, 
 
 The beauty of a loyal life, 
 Is nature in thee too spiritless, 
 
 Ignoble, impotent, and dead, 
 To prize her love and loveliness 
 
 The more for being thy daily bread ? 
 And art thou one of that vile crew 
 
 Which see no splendour in the sun, 
 Praising alone the good that's new, 
 
 Or over, or not yet begun ? 
 And has it dawn'd on thy dull wits 
 
 That love warms many as soft a nest, 
 That, though swathed round with benefits, 
 
 Thou art not singularly blest ?
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 And fail thy thanks for gifts divine, 
 
 The common food of many a heart, 
 Because they are not only thine ? 
 
 Beware lest in the end thou art 
 Cast as a goat forth from the fold, 
 
 Too proud to feel the common grace 
 Of blissful myriads who behold 
 
 For evermore the Father's face.
 
 PRELUDES. 113 
 
 III. 
 
 The Zest of Life. 
 
 < 
 
 GIVE thanks. It is not time misspent ; 
 
 Worst fare this betters, and the best, 
 Wanting this natural condiment, 
 
 Breeds crudeness, and will not digest. 
 The grateful love the Giver's law ; 
 
 But those who eat, and look no higher, 
 From sin or doubtful sanction draw 
 
 The biting sauce their feasts require. 
 Give thanks for nought, if you've no more, 
 
 And, having all things, do not doubt 
 That nought, with thanks, is blest before 
 
 Whate'er the world can give, without
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 IY. 
 
 Fool and Wise. 
 
 ENDOW the fool with sun and moon, 
 Being his, he holds them mean and low, 
 
 But to the wise a little boon 
 Is great, because the giver's so.
 
 SAHAEA. 
 I. 
 
 I STOOD by Honor and the Dean, 
 
 They seated in the London train. 
 A month from her ! yet this had been, 
 
 Ere now, without such bitter pain. 
 But neighbourhood makes parting light, 
 
 And distance remedy has none ; 
 Alone, she near, I felt as might 
 
 A blind man sitting in the sun ; 
 She near, all for the time was well ; 
 
 Hope's self, when we were far apart, 
 "With lonely feeling, like the smell 
 
 Of heath on mountains, fill'd my heart. 
 To see her seem'd delight's full scope, 
 
 And her kind smile, so clear of care, 
 Ev'n then, though darkening all my hope, 
 
 Gilded the cloud of my despair. 
 
 i a
 
 1 1 6 SAHARA. 
 
 2. 
 
 She had forgot to bring a book. 
 
 I lent one ; blamed the print for old ; 
 And did not tell her that she took 
 
 A Tasso worth its weight in gold. 
 I hoped she'd lose it ; for my love 
 
 Was grown so dainty, high, and nice, 
 It prized no luxury above 
 
 The sense of fruitless sacrifice. 
 
 The bell rang, and, with shrieks like death, 
 
 Link catching link, the long army, 
 With ponderous pulse and fiery breath, 
 
 Proud of its burthen, swept away; 
 And through the lingering crowd I broke, 
 
 Sought the hill-side, and thence, heart-sick, 
 Beheld, far off, the little smoke 
 
 Along the landscape kindling quick.
 
 SAHARA. 117 
 
 4- 
 What should I do, where should I go, 
 
 Now she was gone, my love ! for mine 
 She was, whatever here below 
 
 Cross'd or usurp'd my right divine. 
 Life without her was vain and gross, 
 
 The glory from the world was gone, 
 And on the gardens of the Close 
 
 As on Sahara shone the sun. 
 Oppress'd with her departed grace, 
 
 My thoughts on ill surmises fed ; 
 The harmful influence of the place 
 
 She went to fill'd my soul with dread. 
 She, mixing with the people there, 
 
 Might come back alter'd, having caught 
 The foolish, fashionable air 
 
 Of knowing all, and feeling nought. 
 Or, giddy with her beauty's praise, 
 
 She'd scorn our simple country life, 
 Its wholesome nights and tranquil days, 
 
 And would not deign to be my wife.
 
 II& SAHARA. 
 
 " My wife," " my wife," oh, tenderest word ! 
 
 How oft, as fearful she might hear, 
 Whispering that name of "wife," I heard 
 
 More than the music of the sphere. 
 
 5- 
 I pass'd the home of my regret. 
 
 The clock was chiming in the hall, 
 And one sad window open yet, 
 
 Although the dews began to fall. 
 Ah, distance shew'd her beauty's scope ! 
 
 How light of heart and innocent 
 That loveliness which sicken'd hope 
 
 And wore the world for ornament ! 
 How perfectly her life was framed ; 
 
 And, thought of in that passionate mood, 
 How her affecting graces shamed 
 
 The vulgar life that was but good ! 
 Ah, none else loved her half enough ; 
 
 No, not her sisters nor the Dean !
 
 SAHARA. 
 
 All tenderness save mine seem'd rough, 
 
 Officious, ignorant, and mean. 
 I wonder'd, would her bird be fed, 
 
 Her rose -plots water'd, she not by, 
 Loading my breast with angry dread 
 
 Of light, unlikely injury. 
 So, fill'd with love and fond remorse, 
 
 I paced the Close, its every part 
 Endow'd with reliquary force 
 
 To heal and raise from death my heart. 
 How tranquil and unsecular 
 
 The precinct ! Ouce, through yonder gate, 
 I saw her go, and knew from far 
 
 Her noble form and gentle state ; 
 Her dress had brush'd this wicket ; here 
 
 She turn'd her face, and laugh'd, with looks 
 Like moonbeams on a wavering mere ; 
 
 This was her stall, these were her books ; 
 Here had she knelt. Here now I stay'd, 
 
 While Prayers were read ; in griefs despite
 
 120 SAHARA. 
 
 Felt grief assuaged ; then homeward stray'd, 
 Weary beforehand of the night. 
 
 The blackbird, in the shadowy wood, 
 Talk'd by himself, and eastward grew 
 
 In heaven the symbol of my mood, 
 
 Where one bright star engross'd the blue.
 
 121 
 
 CANTO X. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Joyful Wisdom. 
 
 WOULD Wisdom for herself be woo'd, 
 
 And wake the foolish from his dream, 
 She must be glad as well as good, 
 
 And must not only be, but seem. 
 Beauty and joy are hers by right ; 
 
 And, knowing this, I wonder less 
 That she's so scorn'd, when falsely dight 
 
 In misery and ugliness. 
 What's that which Heav'n to man endears 
 
 And that which eyes no sooner see
 
 122 PRELUDES. 
 
 Than the heart says, with floods of tears, 
 
 " Ah, that's the thing which I would be ! " 
 Not childhood, full of frown and fret ; 
 
 Not youth, impatient to disown 
 Those visions high, which to forget 
 
 Were worse than never to have known ; 
 Not worldlings, in whose fair outside 
 
 Nor courtesy nor justice fails, 
 Whose virtues are but vices tied, 
 
 Like Samson's foxes, by the tails ; 
 Not poets : real things are dreams, 
 
 When dreams are as realities, 
 And boasters of celestial gleams 
 
 Go stumbling aye for want of eyes ; 
 Not patriots or people's men, 
 
 In whom two worse-match'd evils meet 
 Than ever sought Adullam's den, 
 
 Base conscience and a high conceit ; 
 Not new-made saints, their feelings iced, 
 
 Their joy in man and nature gone, 
 Who sing " O, easy yoke of Christ !" 
 
 But find 'tis hard to get it on ;
 
 PRELUDES. 133 
 
 Not great men, even when they're good j 
 
 The good man whom the Lord makes great, 
 By some disgrace of chance or blood 
 
 He fails not to humiliate ; 
 Not these : but souls, found here and there, 
 
 Oases in our waste of sin, 
 Where everything is well and fair, 
 
 And God remits his discipline; 
 Whose sweet subdual of the world 
 
 The worldling scarce can recognise, 
 And ridicule, against it hurl'd, 
 
 Drops with a broken sting and dies ; 
 Who nobly, if they cannot know 
 
 Whether a 'scutcheon's dubious field 
 Carries a falcon or a crow, 
 
 Fancy a falcon on the shield ; 
 Yet, ever careful not to hurt 
 
 God's honour, who creates success, 
 Their praise of even the best desert 
 Is but to have presumed no less ; 
 And, should their own life plaudits bring, 
 They're simply vex'd at heart that such
 
 124 PRELUDES. 
 
 An easy, yea, delightful thing 
 
 Should move the minds of men so nruch. 
 They live by law, not like the fool, 
 
 But like the bard, who freely sings 
 In strictest bonds of rhyme and rule, 
 
 And finds in them, not bonds, but wings. 
 Postponing still their private ease 
 
 To courtly custom, appetite, 
 Subjected to observances, 
 
 To banquet goes with full delight ; 
 Nay, continence and gratitude 
 
 So cleanse their lives from earth's alloy, 
 They taste, in nature's common food, 
 
 Nothing but spiritual joy. 
 They shine like Moses in the face, 
 
 And teach our hearts, without the rod, 
 That God's grace is the only grace, 
 
 And all grace is the grace o f God.
 
 PRELUDES. 125 
 
 II. 
 
 Truth and Love. 
 
 SHE whom the sacred Books declare 
 
 The Crown and Glory of the man, 
 Is much too nearly dear my care 
 
 For me with sequent thoughts to scan. 
 In her prized interest yet I prove, 
 
 With words that ne'er shall be forgot, 
 Such perfect friends are truth and love 
 
 That neither lives where both are not. 
 Praise then my Song where'er it comes, 
 
 Ladies, whose innocence makes bright 
 England, the land of courtly homes, 
 
 The world's exemplar and delight.
 
 126 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 The Devices. 
 
 LOVE, kiss'd by Wisdom, wakes twice love, 
 And Wisdom is, thro' loving, wise. 
 
 Let Dove and Snake, and Snake and Dove, 
 This Wisdom's be, that Love's device.
 
 127 
 
 GOING TO CHURCH. 
 
 i. 
 
 I WOKE at three ; for I was bid 
 
 To breakfast with the Dean at nine, 
 And thence to Church. My curtain slid, 
 
 I found the dawning Sunday fine, 
 And could not rest, so rose. The air 
 
 Was dark and sharp ; the roosted birds 
 Cheep' d, " Here am I, Sweet ; are you there ?" 
 
 On Avon's misty flats the herds 
 Expected, comfortless, the day, 
 
 Which slowly fired the clouds above ; 
 The cock scream'd, somewhere far away ; 
 
 In sleep the matrimonial dove 
 Was brooding ; no wind waked the wood, 
 
 Nor moved the midnight river-damps, 
 Nor thrill'd the poplar ; quiet stood 
 
 The chestnut with its thousand lamps j
 
 128 GOING TO CHUKCH. 
 
 The moon shone yet, but weak and drear, 
 And seem'd to watch, with bated breath, 
 
 The landscape, all made sharp and clear 
 By stillness, as a face by death. 
 
 2. 
 
 My prayers for her being done, I took 
 
 Occasion by the quiet hour 
 To find and know, by Rule and Book, 
 
 The rights of love's beloved power. 
 
 Fronting the question without ruth, 
 
 Not ignorant that, evermore, 
 If men will stoop to kiss the Truth, 
 
 She lifts them higher than before, 
 I from above such light required 
 
 As now should once for all destroy 
 The folly which at times desired 
 
 A sanction for so great a joy.
 
 GOING TO CHURCH. I 29 
 
 4- 
 
 Thenceforth, and through that prayer, T trod 
 
 A path with no suspicions dim. 
 I loved her in the name of God, 
 
 And for the ray she was of Him ; 
 I ought to admire much more, not less ; 
 
 Her beauty was a godly grace ; 
 The mystery of loveliness, 
 
 Which made an altar of her face, 
 Was not of the flesh, though that was fair, 
 
 But a most pure and living light 
 Without a name, by which the rare 
 
 And virtuous spirit flamed to sight. 
 If oft, in love, effect lack'd cause 
 
 And cause effect, 'twere vain to soar 
 Reasons to seek for that which was 
 
 Reason itself, or something more. 
 My jy was n <> idolatry 
 
 Upon the ends of the vile earth bent, 
 
 K
 
 130 GOING TO CHURCH. 
 
 For when I loved her most then I 
 
 Most yearn'd for more divine content. 
 That other doubt, which, like a ghost 
 
 At all love's banquets haunted me, 
 Was thus resolved : Him loved I most, 
 
 But her I loved most sensibly. 
 Lastly, my giddiest hope allow'd 
 
 No selfish thought, or earthly smirch ; 
 And forth I went, in peace, and proud 
 
 To take my passion into Church ; 
 Grateful and glad to think that all 
 
 Such doubts would seem entirely vain 
 To her whose nature's lighter fall 
 
 Made no divorce of heart from brain. 
 
 5- 
 
 I found them, with exactest grace 
 
 And fresh as Spring, for Spring attired 
 
 And by the radiance in her face 
 I saw she felt she was admired ;
 
 GOING TO CHURCH. 13! 
 
 And, through the common luck of love, 
 
 A moment's fortunate delay, 
 To fit the little lilac glove, 
 
 Gave me her arm ; and I and they, 
 (They true to this and every hour, 
 
 As if attended on by Time), 
 Went into Church while yet the tower 
 
 Was noisy with the finish'd chime. 
 
 6. 
 
 Her soft voice, singularly heard 
 
 Beside me, in the Psalms, withstood 
 The roar of voices, like a bird 
 
 Sole warbling in a windy wood ; 
 And, when we knelt, she seem'd to be 
 
 An angel teaching me to pray ; 
 And all through the high Liturgy 
 
 My spirit rejoiced without allay, 
 Being for once borne clearly above 
 
 All banks and bars of ignorance, 
 
 K 2
 
 132 GOING TO CHURCH. 
 
 By tliis bright spring-tide of pure love, 
 And floated in a free expanse, 
 
 Whence it could see from side to side, 
 The obscurity from every part 
 
 Winnow'd away and purified 
 By the vibrations of my heart. 
 
 The Dean's Text, (oft it happens thus,) 
 
 Most apt to what my thoughts employ' d, 
 "Was Paul's word to those, infamous, 
 
 Of natural affection void. 
 He preach'd but what the conscience saith 
 
 To those blest few who listen well : 
 " No fruit can come of that man's faith 
 
 " Who is to Nature infidel. 
 " God stands not with Himself at strife : 
 
 " His work is first, His Word is next : 
 " Two sacred tomes, one Book of Life ; 
 
 " The comment this, and that the text.
 
 GOING TO CHURCH. 133 
 
 " HI worship they who drop the Creed, 
 
 " And take their chance with Jew and Turk ; 
 
 " But not so ill as they who read 
 
 " The Word, and doubt the greater Work."
 
 CANTO XI. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Daughter of Eve. 
 
 THE woman's gentle mood o'erstept 
 
 Withers my love, that lightly scans 
 The rest, and does in her accept 
 
 All her own faults, but none of man's. 
 As man I cannot judge her ill, 
 
 Or honour her fair station less, 
 Who, with a woman's errors, still 
 
 Preserves {.woman's gentleness; 
 For thus I think, if one I see 
 
 Who disappoints my high desire
 
 136 PRELUDES. 
 
 " How admirable would she be, 
 
 " Could she but know how I admire !" 
 Or fail she, though from blemish clear, 
 
 To charm, I call it my defect ', 
 And so my thought, with reverent fear 
 
 To err by doltish disrespect, 
 Imputes love's great regard, and says, 
 
 " Though unapparent 'tis to me, 
 "Be sure this Queen some other sways 
 
 " With well perceiv'd supremacy." 
 Behold the worst ! Light from above 
 
 On the blank ruin writes " Forbear ! 
 " Her first crime was unguarded love, 
 
 " And all the rest was mere despair." 
 Discrown' d, dejected, but not lost, 
 
 O, sad one, with no more a name 
 Or place in all the honour'd host 
 
 Of maiden and of matron fame, 
 Grieve on ; but, If thou grievest right, 
 
 'Tis not that these abhor thy state, 
 Nor would'st thou lower the least the height 
 
 Which makes thy casting down so great.
 
 PRELUDES. 137 
 
 Good is thy lot in its degree ; 
 
 For hearts that verily repent 
 Are burden'd with impunity 
 
 And comforted by chastisement. 
 Sweet patience sanctify thy woes ! 
 
 And doubt not but our God is just, 
 Albeit unscath'd thy traitor goes, 
 
 And thou art stricken to the dust. 
 That penalty's the best to bear 
 
 Which follows soonest on the sin ; 
 And guilt's a game where losers fare 
 
 Better than those who seem to win.
 
 138 PBELUDES. 
 
 II. 
 
 Aurea Dicta, 
 
 T*is truth, (although this truth's a star 
 Too deep-enskied for all to see), 
 
 As poets of grammar, lovers are 
 The well-heads of morality. 
 
 Child, would you shun the vulgar doom, 
 In love disgust, in death despair ? 
 
 Know, death must come and love must come, 
 And so for each your soul prepare. 
 
 Who pleasure follows pleasure slays ; 
 
 God's wrath upon himself he wreaks ; 
 But all delights rejoice his days 
 
 Who takes with thanks, and never seeks.
 
 PRELUDES. 139 
 
 The wrong is made and measured by 
 The right's inverted dignity. 
 
 Change love to shame, as love is high 
 So low in hell your bed shall be. 
 
 How easy to keep free from sin ! 
 
 How hard that freedom to recall ! 
 For dreadful truth it is that men 
 
 Forget the heavens from which they fall. 
 
 Lest sacred love your soul ensnare, 
 
 With pious fancy still infer 
 " How loving and how lovely fair 
 
 " Must He be who has fashion'd her !" 
 
 Become whatever good you see, 
 
 Nor sigh if, forthwith, fades from view 
 
 The grace of which you may not be 
 The subject and; pectator too.
 
 140 PRELUDES. 
 
 Love's perfect blossom only blows 
 Where noble manners veil defect. 
 
 Angels may be familiar ; those 
 Who err each other must respect. 
 
 Love blabb'd of is a great decline ; 
 
 A careless word unsanctions sense ; 
 But he who casts Heaven's truth to swine 
 
 Consummates all incontinence. 
 
 Not to unveil before the gaze 
 Of an imperfect sympathy 
 
 In aught we are, is the sweet praise 
 And the main sum of modesty.
 
 THE DANCE. 
 
 I. 
 
 " MY memory of heaven awakes ! 
 
 " She's not of the earth, although her light, 
 " As lantern'd by her body, makes 
 
 " A piece of it past bearing bright. 
 " So innocently proud and fair 
 
 " She is, that Wisdom sings for glee 
 " And Folly dies, breathing one air 
 
 " With such a bright-cheek'd chastity ; 
 " And though her charms are a strong law 
 
 " Compelling all men to admire, 
 " They go so clad with lovely awe 
 
 " None but the noble dares desire. 
 " He who would seek to make her his 
 
 " Will comprehend that souls of grace 
 " Own sweet repulsion, and that 'tis 
 
 " The quality of their embrace
 
 THE DANCE. 
 
 " To be like the majestic reach 
 
 " Of coupled suns, that, from afar, 
 " Mingle their mutual spheres, while each 
 
 " Circles the twin obsequious star ; 
 " And in the warmth of hand to hand, 
 
 " Of heart to heart, he'll vow to note 
 " And reverently understand 
 
 " How the two spirits shine remote ; 
 " And ne'er to numb fine honour's nerve, 
 
 " Nor let sweet awe in passion melt, 
 " Nor fail by courtesies to observe 
 
 " The space which makes attraction felt ; 
 " Nor cease to guard like life the sense 
 
 " Which tells him that the embrace of love 
 " Is o'er a gulf of difference 
 
 "Love cannot sound, nor death remove." 
 
 2. 
 This learn'd I, watching where she danced, 
 
 Native to melody and light, 
 And now and then toward me glanced, 
 
 Pleased, as I hoped, to please my sight.
 
 THtf DANCE. 143 
 
 3- 
 
 Ah, love to speak was impotent, 
 
 Till music did a tongue confer, 
 And I ne'er knew what music meant, 
 
 Until I danced to it with her. 
 Too proud of the sustaining power 
 
 Of my, till then, unblemish'd joy, 
 My passion, for reproof, that hour 
 
 Tasted mortality's alloy, 
 And bore me down an eddying gulf ; 
 
 T wish'd the world might run to wreck, 
 So I but once might fling myself 
 
 Obliviously about her neck. 
 I press'd her hand, by will or chance 
 
 I know not, but I saw the rays 
 Withdrawn, which did till then enhance 
 
 Her fairness with its thanks for praise. 
 I knew my spirit's vague ofience 
 
 Was patent to the dreaming eye 
 And heavenly tact of innocence, 
 
 And did for fear my fear defy,
 
 144 THE DANCE. 
 
 And ask'd her for the next dance. " Yes." 
 
 "No" had not fall'n with half the force. 
 She was fulfill'd with gentleness, 
 
 And I with measureless remorse ; 
 And, ere I slept, on bended knee 
 
 I own'd myself, with many a tear, 
 Unseasonable, disorderly, 
 
 And a deranger of love's sphere ; 
 Gave thanks that, when we stumble and fall, 
 
 We hurt ourselves, and not the truth, 
 And, rising, found its brightness all 
 
 The brighter through the tears of ruth. 
 
 4- 
 Nor was my hope that night made less, 
 
 Though order'd, humbled, and reproved; 
 Her farewell did her hsart express 
 
 As much, but not with anger, moved. 
 My trouble had my soul betray'd ; 
 
 And, in the night of my despair,
 
 THE DANCE. 145 
 
 My love, a flower of noon afraid, 
 
 Divulged its fulness unaware. 
 I saw she saw ; and, sweet Heaven, 
 
 Could my glad mind have credited 
 That influence had to me been given 
 
 To affect her so, I should have said 
 That, though she from herself conceal'd 
 
 Love's felt delight and fancied harm, 
 They made her face the jousting field 
 
 Of joy and beautiful alarm.
 
 147 
 
 CANTO XII. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Chace. 
 
 SHE wearies with an ill unknown ; 
 
 In sleep she sobs and seems to float, 
 A water-lily, all alone 
 
 Within a lonely castle-moat ; 
 And as the full-moon, spectral, lies 
 
 Within the crescent's gleaming arms, 
 The present shows her heedless eyes 
 
 A future dim with vague alarms. 
 She sees, and yet she scarcely sees ; 
 
 For, life-in-life not yet begun, 
 
 L 2
 
 148 PRELUDES. 
 
 Too many are its mysteries 
 
 For thought to fix on any one. 
 She's told that maidens are by youths 
 
 Extremely honour'd and desired ; 
 And sighs, " If those sweet tales be truths, 
 
 " What bliss to be so much admired !" 
 The suitors come ; she sees them grieve ; 
 
 Her coldness fills them with despair ; 
 She'd pity if she could believe ; 
 
 She's sorry that she cannot care. 
 But who now meets her on her way ? 
 
 Comes he as enemy, or friend, 
 Or both ? Her bosom seems to say 
 
 He cannot pass, and there an end. 
 Whom does he love ? Does he confer 
 
 His heart on worth that answers his 1 
 Or is he come to worship her ? 
 
 She fears, she hopes, she thinks he is ! 
 Advancing stepless, quick, and still, 
 
 As in the grass a serpent glides, 
 He fascinates her fluttering will, 
 Then terrifies with dreadful strides.
 
 PRELUDES. 149 
 
 At first, there's nothing to resist ; 
 
 He fights with all the forms of peace ; 
 He conies about her like a mist, 
 
 With subtle, swift, unseen increase ; 
 And then, unlook'd for, strikes amain 
 
 Some stroke that frightens her to death, 
 And grows all harmlessness again, 
 
 Ere she can cry, or get her breath. 
 At times she stops, and stands at bay; 
 
 But he, in all more strong than she, 
 Subdues her with his pale dismay, 
 
 Or more admired audacity. 
 She plans some final, fatal blow, 
 
 But, when she means with frowns to kill, 
 He looks as if he loved her so, 
 
 She smiles to him against her will. 
 How sweetly he implies her praise ! 
 
 His tender talk, his gentle tone, 
 The manly worship in his gaze, 
 
 They nearly make her heart his own. 
 With what an air he speaks her name ! 
 
 His manner always recollects
 
 150 PRELUDES. 
 
 Her sex, and still the woman's claim 
 
 Is taught its scope by his respects. 
 Her charms, perceived to prosper first 
 
 In his beloved advertencies, 
 "When in her glass they are rehearsed, 
 
 Prove his most powerful allies. 
 Ah, whither shall a maiden flee, 
 
 When a bold youth so swift pursues, 
 And siege of tenderest courtesy, 
 
 With hope perseverant, still renews 1 
 Why fly so fast ? Her flatter'd breast 
 
 Thanks him who finds her fair and good ; 
 She loves her fears ; veil'd joys arrest 
 
 The foolish terrors of her blood ; 
 By secret, sweet degrees, her heart, 
 
 Vanquish'd, takes warmth from his desire ; 
 She makes it more, with hidden art, 
 
 And fuels love's late dreaded fire. 
 The generous credit he accords 
 
 To all the signs of good in her 
 Redeems itself ; his praiseful words 
 
 The virtues they impute confer.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 Her heart is thrice as rich in bliss, 
 
 She's three times gentler than before ; 
 He gains a right to call her his, 
 
 Now she through him is so much more ! 
 'Tis heaven where'er she turns her head ; 
 
 'Tis music when she talks ; 'tis air 
 On which, elate, she seems to tread, 
 
 The convert of a gladder sphere ! 
 Ah, might he, when by doubts aggrieved, 
 
 Behold his tokens next her breast, 
 At all his words and sighs perceived 
 
 Against its glad upheaval press'd ! 
 But still she flies. Should she be won, 
 
 It must not be believed or thought 
 She yields ; she's chased to death, undone, 
 
 Surprised, and violently caught.
 
 I5 2 PRELUDES. 
 
 II. 
 
 Denied. 
 
 THE storm-cloud, whose portentous shade 
 
 Fumes from a core of smother'd fire, 
 His livery is whose worship'd maid 
 
 Denies herself to his desire. 
 Ah, grief that almost crushes life, 
 
 To lie upon his lonely bed, 
 And fancy her another's wife ! 
 
 His brain is flame, his heart is lead. 
 Sinking at last, by nature's course, 
 
 Cloak'd round with sleep from his despair, 
 He only sleeps to gather force 
 
 That goes to his exhausted care. 
 He wakes renew'd for all the smart. 
 
 His only Lore, and she is wed ! 
 His fondness comes about his heart, 
 
 As milk comes, when the babe is dead.
 
 PRELUDES. 153 
 
 The wretch, whom she found fit for scorn, 
 His own allegiant thoughts despise ; 
 
 And far into the shining morn 
 Lazy with misery he lies.
 
 154 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 The Churl. 
 
 THIS marks the Churl : when spousals crown 
 His selfish hope, he finds the grace, 
 
 Which sweet love has for even the clown, 
 Was not in the woman, but the chace.
 
 THE ABDICATION. 
 
 i. 
 FROM little signs, like little stars, 
 
 Whose faint impression on the sense 
 The very looking straight at mars, 
 
 Or only seen by confluence ; 
 From instinct of a mutual thought, 
 
 Whence sanctity of manners flow'd ; 
 From chance unconscious, and from what 
 
 Concealment, overconscious, show'd ; 
 Her hand's less weight upon my arm, 
 
 Her lowlier mien ; that match'd with this ; 
 I found, and felt with strange alarm, 
 
 I stood committed to my bliss. 
 
 2. 
 
 I grew assur'd, before I ask'd, 
 
 That she'd be mine without reserve,
 
 156 THE ABDICATION. 
 
 And in her unclaim'd graces bask'd, 
 At leisure, till the time should serve, 
 
 With just enough of dread to thrill 
 The hope, and make it trebly dear ; 
 
 Thus loth to speak the word to kill 
 Either the hope or happy fear. 
 
 3- 
 
 Till once, through lanes returning late, 
 
 Her laughing sisters lagg'd behind ; 
 And, ere we reach'd her father's gate, 
 
 We paused with one presentient mind ; 
 And, in the dim and perfumed mist, 
 
 Their coming stay'd, who, friends to me, 
 And very women, loved to assist 
 
 Love's timid opportunity. 
 
 4- 
 
 Twice rose, twice died my trembling word ; 
 The faint and frail Cathedral chimes
 
 THE ABDICATION. 
 
 Spake time in music, and we heard 
 
 The chafers rustling in the limes. 
 Her dress, that touch'd me where I stood, 
 
 The warmth of her confided arm, 
 Her bosom's gentle neighbourhood, 
 
 Her pleasure in her power to charm ; 
 Her look, her love, her form, her touch, 
 
 The least seem'd most by blissful turn, 
 Blissful but that it pleased too much, 
 
 And taught the wayward soul to yearn. 
 It was as if a harp with wires 
 
 Was traversed by the breath I drew ; 
 And, oh, sweet meeting of desires, 
 
 She, answering, own'd that she loved too. 
 
 Honoria was to be my bride ! 
 
 The hopeless heights of hope were scaled ; 
 The summit won, I paused and sigh'd, 
 
 As if success itself had fail'd.
 
 158 THE ABDICATION. 
 
 It seem'd as if my lips approach'd 
 
 To touch at Tantalus' reward, 
 And rashly on Eden life encroach'd, 
 
 Half-blinded by the flaming sword. 
 The whole world's wealthiest and its best, 
 
 So fiercely sought, appear'd, when found, 
 Poor in its need to be possess'd, 
 
 Poor from its very want of bound. 
 By that consenting scared and shock'd, 
 
 Such change came o'er her mien and mood 
 That I felt startled and half-mock'd, 
 
 As winning what I had not woo'd. 
 My queen was crouching at my side, 
 
 By love unscepter'd and brought low, 
 Her awful garb of maiden pride 
 
 All melted into tears like snow ; 
 The mistress of my reverent thought, 
 
 Whose praise was all I ask'd of fame, 
 In my close- watch 'd approval sought 
 
 Protection as from danger and blame ;
 
 THE ABDICATION. 159 
 
 Her soul, which late I loved to invest 
 
 With pity for my poor desert, 
 Buried its face within my breast, 
 
 Like a pet fawn by hunters hurt. 
 
 6. 
 
 Sweet are the flatteries of love ; 
 
 They neither would nor do deceive, 
 Albeit they lift our hearts above 
 
 All flatteries which our hearts believe 1 
 But this of making me her lord 
 
 Appear'd such passionate excess, 
 I almost wish'd her state restored, 
 
 I almost wish'd she loved me less. 
 I felt abash'd, and look'd aside 
 
 From honour I might not refuse, 
 Until I saw my shame was pride, 
 
 Since love in love discerns all dues,
 
 160 THE ABDICATION. 
 
 And never of meaner payment speaks, 
 But loves to love for love's sole sake, 
 
 And in its object only seeks 
 
 That worth which only love can wake. 
 
 7- 
 Of this good truth intelligent, 
 
 I buried soon, in the deep sea 
 Of a most near and dear content, 
 
 All pride and all humility; 
 So she beside me sate her down, 
 
 Excused from dignity and care, 
 And I submitted to the crown 
 
 No choice was left me but to wear.
 
 i6t 
 
 THE EPILOGUE. 
 
 i. 
 
 His " Book the First" so finish'd, Vaughan, 
 
 Elated with his partner's praise, 
 March'd laughing up and down the lawn, 
 
 With brows that seem'd to feel the bays. 
 She thought the Critics must admire 
 
 What seemed to her such lovely rhymes ! 
 " Nay," answer'd he, with rising ire, 
 
 Foreboding " Blackwood" and " The Times," 
 " I'm not a Chartist or a lord ; 
 
 " To strut on stilts is not my use ; 
 " And my vain claim to their good word 
 
 " Is nothing but a noble Muse." 
 Then, boasting Songs to come, he said 
 
 The strains with which the next began 
 Pass'd all he'd written yet ; and read 
 
 The opening verses. Thus they ran : 
 
 M
 
 162 THE EPILOGUE. 
 
 2. 
 
 " 'Tis so beyond conceiving sweet 
 
 " To love and be beloved in turn, 
 " That lovers talk, whene'er they meet, 
 
 " Only their joy to teach and learn. 
 " They tell how dearly they adore ; 
 
 " Will not believe they are believed ; 
 " And tell the tidings o'er and o'er, 
 
 " And kiss to make their words conceived ; 
 " And then take hands with sighs' soft speech, 
 
 " And tell the same sweet tale again ; 
 " The same sweet mystery learn and teach ; 
 
 " And kiss and kiss to make it plain. 
 " Beloved tautologies of love ! 
 
 " Which ever, ever both repeat ; 
 " Which never, never seem to prove 
 
 " The point to cither's fond conceit ; 
 "Because, indeed, " 
 
 3- 
 
 But here his Wife, 
 All praise till now, objected : " This,"
 
 THE EPILOGUE. 1 63 
 
 Said she, " you did not take from life ; 
 
 " You should not make the lady kiss." 
 The fault confess'd with light demur, 
 
 Those lines he promised to remove, 
 Fixing in colloquy with her, 
 
 As canons of their Court of Love : 
 " Like and like chime, same and same jar ; 
 
 " If she to womanhood is true, 
 " To manhood he, their feelings are 
 
 " In difference match' d, like red and blue." 
 
 4- 
 
 Then, pondering what the difference was, 
 
 He ask'd her thrice, would she be pleased 
 To help his Muse ; but she grew cross, 
 
 And begg'd that she might not be teased. 
 " Well, till you tell me freely why 
 
 " You love me, you shall have no kiss ; 
 " And so, till dinner-time, good-bye !" 
 
 Said he, used to prevail by this. 
 
 M 2
 
 164 THE EPILOGUE. 
 
 She : " Dearest, do not leave me so !" 
 
 He : " Give the reasons, one and all." 
 She, laughing : " Love, I do not know, 
 
 " Unless it is that you're so tall." 
 On tiptoe, then, she stood to touch 
 
 His lips with her's, but three times miss'd, 
 And pouted. " Nay, then, tell how much T 
 
 " How can I, if you'll not be kiss'd !" 
 Baffled, he thought the difference o'er ; 
 
 Soon smiled, and said he knew it well ; 
 But, good World, Love shows Poets more 
 
 Than you deserve that they should tell.
 
 THE ANGEL IN THE HOUSE. 
 
 I. 
 
 BOOK II. THE ESPOUSALS. 
 
 " I came oat as a brook from a river, and as a conduit into a garden. 
 I said, I will water my best garden, and will water abundantly my 
 garden-bed : and lo, my brook became a river, and my river became a 
 sea." ECCLUS. xxrv. 30, 31.
 
 THE PKOLOGUE. 
 
 i. 
 
 HER sons pursue the butterflies, 
 
 Her baby daughter mocks the doves 
 With throbbing coo ; in his fond eyes 
 
 She's Venus with her little Loves ; 
 Her footfall dignifies the earth, 
 
 Her form's the native-land of grace, 
 And, lo, his coming lights with mirth 
 
 Its court and capital her face ! 
 Of such a lady proud's the lord, 
 
 And that her flatter'd bosom knows ; 
 She takes his arm without a word, 
 
 In lanes of laurel and of rose. 
 Ten years to-day has she been his. 
 
 He but begins to understand,
 
 1 68 THE PROLOGUE. 
 
 He says, the dignity and bliss 
 
 She gave him when she gave her hand. 
 Would she believe, should he aver, 
 
 To press that hand, though part so small 
 Of the honour he enjoys in her, 
 
 Seems now much more than when 'twas all 1 
 She, answering, says, he disenchants 
 
 The past, though that was perfect ; he 
 Rejoins, the present nothing wants 
 
 But briefness to be ecstasy. 
 He lauds her charms ; her beauty's glow 
 
 Wins from the spoiler Time new rays ; 
 Bright looks reply, approving so 
 
 Beauty's elixir vitse, praise. 
 Upon a beech he bids her mark 
 
 Where, ten years since, he carved her name ; 
 It grows there with the growing bark, 
 
 And in his heart it grows the same. 
 For that her soft arm presses his 
 
 Close to her fond, maternal breast ;
 
 THE PROLOGUE. 169 
 
 He tells her, each fresh favour is 
 
 The effectual sum of all the rest ! 
 And, whilst the cushat, mocking, coo'd, 
 
 They blest the days that they'd been wed 
 At cost of those in which he woo'd, ' 
 
 Till everything was three times said ; 
 And words were growing vain, when Briggs, 
 
 Factotum, Footman, Butler, Groom, 
 Who made the cyder, fed the pigs, 
 
 Preserved the rabbits, drove the brougham, 
 And help'd, at need, to mow the lawns, 
 
 Get in the math, and thatch the ricks, 
 Here brought the Post down, Mrs. Vaughan's 
 
 Sole rival, Yenus Meretrix. 
 
 2. 
 
 Joy to the lovely, lawful dame ! 
 
 'Twas, scarcely looked at, push'd aside, 
 Though news-puffd like the cheeks of Fame. 
 
 News, County business, all must bide ;
 
 170 THE PROLOGUE. 
 
 For now the longed-for " Second Book," 
 Till this tenth festival kept close, 
 
 Was thus commenced, while o'er them shook 
 The laurel married with the rose. 
 
 " The pulse of War, whose bloody heats 
 " Sane purposes insanely work, 
 
 " Now with fraternal frenzy beats, 
 
 i 
 " And binds the Christian to the Turk, 
 
 " And shrieking fifes" 
 
 But, with a roar, 
 In rush'd the Loves ; the tallest roll'd 
 
 A hedgehog from his pinafore, 
 
 Which saved his fingers ; Baby, bold, 
 
 Touch'd it, and stared, and screamed for life, 
 And stretch'd her hand for Yaughan to kiss,
 
 THE PROLOGUE. 171 
 
 Who hugg'd his Pet, and ask'd his wife, 
 
 " Is this for love, or love for this T 
 But she turn'd pale, for, lo, the beast 
 
 Found stock-still in the rabbit-trap, 
 And feigning so to be deceased, 
 
 And laid by Frank upon her lap, 
 TJnglobed himself, and show'd his snout, 
 
 And fell, scattering the Loves amain, 
 With shriek, with laughter, and with shout ; 
 
 And peace at last restored again, 
 The Bard, who this untimely hitch 
 
 Bore with a calm magnanimous, 
 (The hedgehog kick'd into a ditch, 
 
 And Venus sooth'd,) proceeded thus :
 
 '73 
 
 CANTO I. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Song of Songs. 
 
 THE pulse of war, whose bloody heats 
 
 Sane purposes insanely work, 
 Now with fraternal frenzy beats, 
 
 And binds the Christian to the Turk, 
 And shrieking fifes and braggart flags, 
 
 Through quiet England, teach our breath 
 The courage corporate that drags 
 
 The coward to heroic death. 
 Too late for song ! Who henceforth sings, 
 
 Must fledge his heavenly flight with more
 
 174 PRELUDES. 
 
 Song- worthy and heroic things 
 
 Than hasty, home-destroying war. 
 While might and right are not agreed, 
 
 And battle thus is yet to wage, 
 So long let laurels be the meed 
 
 Of soldier as of poet sage ; 
 But men await the Tale of Love, 
 
 And weary of the Tale of Troy ; 
 Lift me, O Muse, myself above, 
 
 To win the honour and the joy !
 
 PRELUDES. 175 
 
 II. 
 
 The Kites. 
 
 I SAW three Cupids, (so I dream'd), 
 
 Who made three kites, on which were drawn, 
 In letters that like roses gleam'd, 
 
 " Plato," " Anacreon," and " Vaughan." 
 The boy who held by Plato tried 
 
 His airy venture first ; all sail, 
 It heav'nward rush'd till scarce descried, 
 
 Then pitch'd and dropp'd, for want of taiL 
 Anacreon's Love, with shouts of mirth 
 
 That pride of spirit thus should fall, 
 To his kite link'd a lump of earth, 
 
 And, lo, it would not soar at all. 
 Last, my disciple freighted his 
 
 With a long streamer made of flowers, 
 The children of the sod, and this 
 
 Rose in the sun and flew for hours.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 Orpheus. 
 
 THE music of the Sirens found 
 
 Ulysses weak, though cords were strong ; 
 But happier Orpheus stood unbound, 
 
 And shamed it with a sweeter song. 
 His mode be mine. Of Heav'n I ask, 
 
 May I, with heart- persuading might, 
 Pursue the Poet's sacred task 
 
 Of superseding faith by sight, 
 Till ev'n the witless Gadarene, 
 
 Preferring Christ to swine, shall know 
 That life is sweetest when it's clean. 
 
 To prouder folly let me show 
 Earth by divine light made divine ; 
 
 And let the saints, who hear my word, 
 Say, " Lo, the clouds begin to shine 
 
 " About the coming of the Lord !"
 
 PRELUDES. 177 
 
 IV. 
 
 Nearest the Dearest. 
 
 TILL Eve was brought to Adam, he 
 
 A solitary desert trod, 
 Though in the great society 
 
 Of nature, angels, and of God. 
 If one slight column counterweighs 
 
 The ocean, 'tis the Maker's law, 
 Who deems obedience better praise 
 
 Than sacrifice of erring awe.
 
 178 PKELUDES. 
 
 V. 
 
 Star and Planet. 
 
 WHAT seems to us for us is true. 
 
 The planet has no proper light, 
 And yet to subtlest mortal view 
 
 The primal star is not so bright.
 
 179 
 
 ACCEPTED. 
 
 i. 
 
 WHAT fortune did my heart foretell ? 
 
 What shook my spirit, as I woke, 
 Like the vibration of a bell 
 
 Of which I had not heard the stroke ? 
 Was it some happy vision shut 
 
 From memory by the sun's fresh ray ? 
 Was it that linnet's song ; or but 
 
 A natural gratitude for day ? 
 Or the mere joy the senses weave, 
 
 A wayward ecstasy of life ? 
 Then I remember'd, yester-eve 
 
 I won Honoria for my wife. 
 
 2. 
 
 Forth riding, while as yet the day 
 Was dewy, watching Sarum Spire,
 
 l8o ACCEPTED. 
 
 Still beckoning me along ray way, 
 
 And growing every minute higher, 
 I reach'd the Dean's. One blind was down, 
 
 Though nine then struck. My bride to be ! 
 And had she rested ill, my own, 
 
 With thinking (oh, my heart !) of me ? 
 I paced the streets ; a pistol chose, 
 
 To guard my now important life 
 When riding late from Sarum Close ; 
 
 At noon return'd. Good Mrs. Fife, 
 To my, " The Dean, is he at home V 
 
 Said, " No, Sir ; but Miss Honor is ;" 
 And straight, not asking if I'd come, 
 
 Announced me, " Mr. Felix, Miss," 
 To Mildred, in the Study. There 
 
 We talk'd, she working. We agreed 
 The day was fine ; the Fancy-Fair 
 
 Successful ; " Did I ever read 
 "DeGenlis?" "Never." "Do! She heard 
 
 " I was engaged." " To whom ?" " Miss Fry.
 
 ACCEPTED. 1 8 I 
 
 Was it the fact ?" No !" " On my word ?" 
 
 " What scandal people talk'd !" " Would I 
 " Hold out this skein of silk." So pass'd 
 
 I knew not how much time away. 
 " How were her sisters ?" " Well." At last 
 
 I summon'd heart enough to say, 
 " I hoped to have seen Miss Churchill too." 
 
 " Miss Churchill, Felix ! What is this ? 
 " I said, and now I find it's true, 
 
 " Last night you quarrell'd ! Here she is." 
 
 3- 
 
 She enter'd, like a morning rose 
 
 Ruffled with rain, and made me blush ; 
 Her crown once more was on her brows ; 
 
 And, with a faint, indignant flush, 
 And fainter smile, she gave her hand, 
 
 But not her eyes, then sate apart, 
 As if to make me understand 
 
 The honour of her vanquish'd heart.
 
 I 82 ACCEPTED. 
 
 But I drew humbly to her side ; 
 
 And she, well pleased, perceiving me 
 Subdued again before the pride 
 
 Of her unconquer'd majesty, 
 Once and for all put it away; 
 
 The faint flush pass'd ; and, thereupon, 
 Her loveliness, which rather lay 
 
 In light than colour, smiled and shone, 
 Till sick was all my soul with bliss j 
 
 Or was it with remorse and ire 
 That grace so worshipful as this 
 
 Should not have set its heaven higher ?
 
 CANTO II. 
 
 tars* at to Jtoto. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Changed Allegiance. 
 
 WATCH how a bird, that captived sings, 
 
 The cage set open, first looks out, 
 Yet fears the freedom of his wings, 
 
 And now withdraws, and flits about, 
 And now looks forth again ; until, 
 
 Grown bold, he perches here and there, 
 And now attains the window-sill, 
 
 And now entrusts himself to air. 
 The maiden so, from love's free sky 
 
 In chaste and prudent counsels caged,
 
 184 PRELUDES. 
 
 But longing to be loosen'd by 
 
 Her suitor's faith declared and gaged, 
 When blest with that release desired, 
 
 First doubts if truly she is free, 
 Then pauses, restlessly retired, 
 
 .Alarm'd at too much liberty; 
 But soon, remembering all her debt 
 
 To plighted passion, gets by rote 
 Her duty ; says, " I love him !" yet 
 
 The thought half chokes her in her throat ; 
 And, like that fatal " I am thine," 
 
 Comes with alternate gush and check 
 And joltings of the heart, as wine 
 
 Pour'd from a flask of narrow neck. 
 Is he indeed her choice 1 She fears 
 
 Her Yes was rashly said, and shame, 
 Remorse, and ineffectual tears 
 
 Revolt from his conceded claim. 
 Oh, treason ! So, with desperate nerve, 
 
 She cries, " I am in love, am his !"
 
 PRELUDES. 185 
 
 Lets run the cables of reserve, 
 
 And floats into a sea of bliss, 
 And laughs to think of her alarm, 
 
 Avows she was in love before, 
 Though his avowal was the charm 
 
 Which open'd to her own the door. 
 She loves him for his mastering air, 
 
 Whence, Parthian-like, she slaying flies ; 
 His flattering look, which seems to wear 
 
 Her loveliness in manly eyes ; 
 His smile, which, by reverse, portends 
 
 An awful wrath, should reason stir ; 
 (How fortunate it is they're friends, 
 
 And he will ne'er be wroth with her !) 
 His power to do or guard from harm ; 
 
 If he but chose to use it half, 
 And catch her up in one strong arm, 
 
 What could she do but weep, or laugh ! 
 His words, which still instruct, biit so 
 
 That this applause seems still implied,
 
 1 86 PRELUDES. 
 
 "How wise in all she ought to know, 
 
 " How ignorant of all beside !" 
 His skilful suit, which leaves her free, 
 
 Gives nothing for the world to name, 
 And keeps her conscience safe, while he, 
 
 With half the bliss, takes all the blame ; 
 His clear repute with great and small ; 
 
 The jealousy his choice will stir ; 
 But, ten times more than ten times all, 
 
 She loves him for his love of her. 
 How happy 'tis that he can see 
 
 In her that utter loveliness 
 Which she, for his sake, longs to be ! 
 
 At times, she cannot but confess 
 Her other friends are somewhat blind ; 
 
 Her parents' years excuse neglect, 
 But all the rest are scarcely kind, 
 
 And brothers grossly want respect ; 
 And oft she views what he admires 
 
 Within her glass, and sight of this
 
 PRELUDES. 187 
 
 Makes all the sum of her desires 
 
 To be devotion unto his. 
 But still, at first, whatever's done, 
 
 A touch, her arm press'd lightly, she 
 Stands dizzied, shock'd, and flush'd, like one 
 
 Set sudden neck-deep in the sea ; 
 And, though her bond for endless time 
 
 To his good pleasure gives her o'er, 
 The slightest favour seems a crime, 
 
 Because it makes her love him more. 
 But that she ne'er will let him know; 
 
 For what were love should reverence cease ? 
 A thought which makes her reason so 
 
 Inscrutable, it seems caprice. 
 With her, as with a desperate town, 
 
 Too weak to stand, too proud to treat, 
 The conqueror, though the walls are down, 
 
 Has still to capture street by street ; 
 But after that, habitual faith, 
 
 Divorced from self, where late 'twas due,
 
 1 88 PRELUDES. 
 
 Walks nobly in its novel path, 
 
 And she's to changed allegiance true ; 
 And, prizing what she can't prevent, 
 
 (Right wisdom, often misdeem'd whim,) 
 Her will's indomitably bent 
 
 On mere submissiveness to him ; 
 To him she'll cleave, for him forsake 
 
 Father's and mother's fond command ! 
 He is her lord, for he can take 
 
 Hold of her feint heart with his hand.
 
 PRELUDES. 1 89 
 
 II. 
 
 Beauty. 
 
 " BEAUTY deludes." O, shaft well shot, 
 
 To strike the mark's true opposite ! 
 That ugly good is scorn'd proves not 
 
 'Tis beauty lies, but lack of it. 
 By Heaveu's law the Jew might take 
 
 A slave to wife, if she was fair ; 
 So strong a plea does beauty make 
 
 That, where 'tis seen, discretion's there. 
 If, by a monstrous chance, we learn 
 
 That this illustrious vaunt's a lie, 
 Our minds, by which the eyes discern, 
 
 See hideous contrariety, 
 And laugh at Nature's wanton mood, 
 
 Which, thus a swinish thing to flout, 
 Though haply in its gross way good, 
 
 Hangs such a jewel in its suout.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 TO 
 
 Lais and Lucretia. 
 
 DID first his beauty wake her sighs ? 
 
 That's Lais ! Thus Lucretia's known 
 The beauty in her Lover's eyes 
 
 Was admiration of her own.
 
 THE COURSE OF TRUE LOVE. 
 
 OH, beating heart of sweet alarm, 
 
 Which stays the lover's step, when near 
 His mistress, and her awful charm 
 
 Of grace and innocence sincere ! 
 I held the half-shut door, and heard 
 
 The voice of my betrothed wife, 
 Who sang my verses, every word 
 
 By music taught its latent life; 
 With interludes of well-touch'd notes, 
 
 That flash'd, surprising and serene, 
 As meteor after meteor floats 
 
 The soft, autumnal stars between. 
 There was a passion in her tone, 
 
 A tremor when she touch'd the keys, 
 Which told me she was there alone, 
 
 And uttering all her soul at ease.
 
 192 THE COURSE OF TRUE LOVE. 
 
 I enter'd; for I did not choose 
 
 To learn how in her heart I throve, 
 
 By chance or stealth ; beyond their use, 
 Her large eyes flatter'd me with love. 
 
 " Is anything amiss to-day? 
 
 Would, Darling, we were safely wed ! " 
 " Oh, yes ! Aunt Maude is come to stay." 
 
 " The Tory? Tell me what she said." 
 With true love's treacherous confidence, 
 
 And ire, at last to laughter won, 
 She told her words, and marked their sense, 
 
 By action, as her Aunt had done. 
 
 3- 
 
 " ' You, with your looks and catching air, 
 
 " ' To think of Vaughan ! You fool ! You know, 
 
 " ' You might, with ordinary care, 
 " Ev'n yet, be Lady Clitheroe.
 
 THE COURSE OP TRUE LOVE. 193 
 
 " ' You're sure he'll do great things some day! 
 
 " ' Nonsense, he wont ; he's dress'd too well. 
 " ' Dines with the Sterling Club, they say; 
 
 " ' Not commonly respectable ! 
 " < Half Puritan, half Cavalier ! 
 
 " ' His curly hair I think's a wig ; 
 " ' And, for his fortune, why, my Dear, 
 
 " ' It's not enough to keep a gig. 
 " ' Rich Aunts and Uncles never die ; 
 
 " ' And what you bring wont do for dress ; 
 " ' And so you'll live on ' Bye-and-bye,' 
 
 " ' With oaten-cake and water-cress !' 
 
 4- 
 " I cried, but did not let her see. 
 
 "At last she softened her dispraise, 
 " On hearing you had bought for me 
 
 " A carriage and a pair of bays. 
 " But here she comes ! You take her in 
 
 " To dinner. I impose this task : 
 " Make her approve my love ; and win 
 
 " What thanks from me you choose to ask P* 
 
 o
 
 1 94 THE COURSE OF TRUE LOVE. 
 5- 
 
 We loathed the " Revolution Bill," 
 
 No Pitts or Burkes had been since then ! 
 The mob had now their idiot will. 
 
 Hard times were ours for gentlemen ! 
 We quite agreed about the Whigs, 
 
 And almost wish'd the Bourbons back, 
 And thought Young Englanders were prigs ; 
 
 Then she, with unexpected tack, 
 " My niece has told you every word 
 
 " I said of you ! What may I mean ? 
 " Of course she has ; but you've not heard 
 
 " How I abused you to the Dean ; 
 " Yes, I'll take wine ; he's mad, like her j 
 
 " And she will have you : there it ends ! 
 " And, now I've done my duty, Sir, 
 
 " And you've shown common-sense, we're friends!' 
 
 6. 
 
 " Go, Child, and see him out yourself," 
 The Dean said, after tea, " and shew
 
 THE COURSE OF TRUE LOVE. 195 
 
 " The place, upon that upper shelf, 
 " Where Tasso stands, lent long ago." 
 
 7- 
 A rose in ruin, from her breast, 
 
 Fell, as I took a fond adieu. 
 " These rose-leaves to my heart be press'd, 
 
 " Honoria, while it aches for you !" 
 " You must go now, Love !" " See, the air 
 
 " Is thick with starlight !" " Let me tie 
 " This scarf on. Oh, your Tasso ! There ! 
 
 " I'm coming, Aunt!" " Sweet, Sweet !" "Good-bye!" 
 " Ah, Love, to me 'tis death to part, 
 
 " Yet you, my sever'd life, smile on !" 
 " These ' Good-nights,' Felix, break my heart ; 
 
 " I'm only gay till you are gone !" 
 With love's bright arrows from her eyes, 
 
 And balm on her permissive lips, 
 She pass'd, and night was a surprise, 
 
 As when the sun at Quito dips. 
 Her beauties were like sunlit snows, 
 
 Flush'd but not warm'd with my desire. 
 
 O 2
 
 196 THE COURSE OF TRUE LOVE. 
 
 0, how I loved her ! Fiercely glows 
 
 In the pure air of frost the fire. 
 " Who for a year is sure of fate 1" 
 
 I thought, dishearten'd, as I went, 
 Wroth with the Dean, who bade me wait, 
 
 And vex'd with her, who seem'd content. 
 " Nay, could eternal life afford 
 
 " That tyranny should thus deduct 
 " From this fair land, which calls me lord, 
 
 " A year of the sweet usufruct V 
 It might not and it should not be ! 
 
 I'd go back now, and he must own, 
 At once, my love's compulsive plea. 
 
 I turn'd, I found the Dean alone. 
 " Nonsense, my friend ; go back to bed ! 
 
 " It's half-past twelve !" " July, then, Sir ?" 
 " Well, come to-morrow," at last he said, 
 
 "And you may talk of it with her." 
 A light gleam'd, as I pass'd the stair. 
 
 A satin foot, a flash of dress, 
 And a sweet voice ! " Is Felix there ?" 
 
 " July, Love !" Says Papa so ?" " Yes !"
 
 i 9 7 
 
 CANTO III. 
 
 all. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 Love Ceremonious, 
 
 KEEP your uudrest, familiar style 
 
 For strangers, but respect your friend, 
 Her most, whose matrimonial smile 
 
 Is and asks honour without end. 
 'Tis found, and needs it must so be, 
 
 That life from love's allegiance flags, 
 When love forgets his majesty 
 
 In sloth's unceremonious rags. 
 Let love make home a gracious Court ; 
 
 There let the world's rude, hasty ways
 
 198 PBELUDES. 
 
 Be fashion'd to a loftier port, 
 
 And learn to bow and stand at gaze ; 
 And let the sweet, respective sphere 
 
 Of personal worship there obtain 
 Circumference for moving clear, 
 
 None treading on another's train. 
 This makes that pleasures do not cloy, 
 
 And dignifies our mortal strife 
 With calmness and considerate joy, 
 
 Befitting our immortal life.
 
 PRELUDES. 199 
 
 II. 
 
 The Rainbo-w. 
 
 A STATELY rainbow carae and stood, 
 
 When I was young, in High-Hurst Park ; 
 Its bright feet lit the hill and wood 
 
 Beyond, and cloud and sward were dark ; 
 And I, who thought the splendour ours 
 
 Because the place was, t' wards it flew, 
 And there, amidst the glittering showers, 
 
 Gazed vainly for the glorious view. 
 With whatsoever's lovely, know 
 
 It is not ours ; stand off to see ; 
 Or beauty's apparition so 
 
 Puts on invisibility.
 
 200 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 A Paradox. 
 
 To tryst Love blindfold goes, for fear 
 He should not see, and eyeless night 
 
 He chooses still for breathing near 
 Beauty, that lives but in the sight.
 
 201 
 
 THE COUNTY BALL, 
 i. 
 
 WELL, Heaven be thank'd my first-love fail'd, 
 
 As, Heaven be thank'd, our first-loves do ! 
 Thought I, when Fanny past me sail'd, 
 
 Loved once, for what I never knew, 
 Unless for colouring in her talk, 
 
 When cheeks and merry mouth would show 
 Three roses on a single stalk, 
 
 The middle wanting room to blow, 
 And forward ways that charm'd the boy 
 
 Whose love-sick mind, misreading fate, 
 Scarce hoped that any Queen of Joy 
 
 Could ever stoop to be his mate. 
 
 2. 
 
 But there danced she, who from the leaven 
 Of ill preserved my heart and wit
 
 202 THE COUNTY BALL. 
 
 All unawares, for she was heaven, 
 
 Others at best but fit for it. 
 One of those lovely things she was 
 
 In whose least action there can be 
 Nothing so transient but it has 
 
 An air of immortality. 
 I mark'd her step, with peace elate, 
 
 Her brow more beautiful than morn, 
 Her sometime look of girlish state 
 
 Which sweetly waived its right to scorn ; 
 The giddy crowd, she grave the while, 
 
 Although, as 'twere beyond her will, 
 Around her mouth the baby smile 
 
 That she was born with linger'd still. 
 Her ball-dress seem'd a breathing mist, 
 
 From the fair form exhaled and shed, 
 Raised in the dance with arm and wrist 
 
 All warmth and light, unbraceleted. 
 Her motion, feeling 'twas beloved, 
 
 The pensive soul of tune express'd, 
 And, oh, what perfume, as she moved, 
 
 Came from the flowers in her breast !
 
 THE COUNTY BALL. 203 
 
 How sweet a tongue the music had ! 
 
 " Beautiful Girl," it seem'd to say, 
 " Though all the world were vile and sad, 
 u Dance on ; let innocence be gay." 
 Ah, none but I discern'd her looks, 
 
 When in the throng she pass'd me by, 
 For love is like a ghost, and brooks 
 
 Only the chosen seer's eye j 
 And who but she could e'er devine 
 
 The halo and the happy trance, 
 When her fair arm reposed on mine, 
 
 In all the pauses of the dance ! 
 If either for all else but one 
 
 Was blinder than the mole that delves, 
 Dark-lanterns for all else, we shone 
 
 But to each other and ourselves. 
 
 3- 
 
 Whilst so her beauty fed my sight, 
 And whilst I lived in what she said, 
 
 Accordant airs, like all delight 
 
 Most sweet when noted least, were play'd ;
 
 304 THE COUNTY BALL. 
 
 And was it like the Pharisee 
 
 If I in secret bow'd my face 
 With joyful thanks that I should be, 
 
 Not as were many, but with grace, 
 And fortune of well-nurtured youth, 
 
 And days no sordid pains defile, 
 And thoughts accustom'd to the truth, 
 
 Made capable of her fair smile 1 
 
 4- 
 
 Charles Barton follow'd down the stair, ( 
 
 To talk with me about the Ball, 
 And laugh at all the people there. 
 
 The Churchills chiefly stirr'd his gall : 
 " My smart things, Vaughan you know, amuse 
 
 " The girls ; but they're not like the rest ; 
 " They make one mind one's p's and q's, 
 
 "And smile at me, and not my jest. 
 " Give me your brisk and light-built Blondes. 
 
 " That tall one's like as like can be
 
 THE COUNTY BALL. 305 
 
 " To those slow Kriemhilds and Isondes 
 
 " You storm'd about at Trinity. 
 " What priggish tastes you had when young ! 
 
 " Mulier furmosa, Vaughan you know : 
 " And, when one sees these charmers long, 
 
 " By Jove we find the fins will show !" 
 Did he not waltz with Fanny Fry ? 
 
 " Ah, there's a trump, now ; worth a pack 
 " Of stupid Kriemhilds. I'd give cry, 
 
 " Only they say you hunt that track." 
 " They err ! Good-night ! Here lies my course, 
 
 " Through Wilton." Silence blest my ears, 
 And, weak at heart with vague remorse, 
 
 A passing poignancy of tears 
 Attack'd mine eyes. By pale and park 
 
 I rode, and ever seem'd to see, 
 In the transparent, starry dark, 
 
 That splendid brow of chastity, 
 That soft and yet subduing light, 
 
 At which, as at the sudden moon,
 
 206 THE COUNTY BALL. 
 
 I held my breath, and thought " how bright !" 
 That guileless beauty in its noon, 
 
 Compelling tribute of desires 
 
 Ardent as day when Sirius reigns, 
 
 Pure as the permeating fires 
 That smoulder in the opal's veins.
 
 207 
 
 CANTO IV. 
 
 Jflrtrt in |Wtwss. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 Honour and Desert. 
 
 QUEEN, awake to thy renown, 
 Require what 'tis our wealth to give, 
 
 And comprehend and wear the crown 
 Of thy despised prerogative ! 
 
 1 who in manhood's name at length 
 With glad songs come to abdicate 
 
 The gross regality of strength, 
 Must yet in this thy praise abate, 
 
 That through thine erring humbleness 
 And disregard of thy degree,
 
 208 PRELUDES. 
 
 Mainly, has man been so much less 
 
 Than fits his fellowship with thee. 
 High thoughts had shaped the foolish brow, 
 
 The coward had grasp'd the hero's sword, 
 The vilest had been great, hadst thou, 
 
 Just to thyself, been worth's reward. 
 But lofty honours undersold 
 
 Seller and buyer both disgrace ; 
 And favour that makes folly bold 
 
 Puts out the light in virtue's face.
 
 PRELUDES. 209 
 
 II. 
 
 Love and Honour. 
 
 WHAT man with baseness so content, 
 
 Or sick with false conceit of right, 
 As not to know that the element 
 
 And inmost warmth of love's delight 
 Is honour ? Who'd not rather kiss 
 
 A duchess than a milkmaid, prank 
 The two in equal grace, which is 
 
 Precedent Nature's obvious rank ? 
 Much rather, then, a woman deck'd 
 
 With saintly honours, chaste and good, 
 Whose thoughts celestial things affect, 
 
 Whose eyes express her heavenly mood ! 
 Those lesser vaunts are dimm'd or lost 
 
 Which plume her name or paint her lip, 
 Extinct in the far brighter boast 
 
 Of her angelic fellowship.
 
 210 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 Valour misdirected. 
 
 " I'LL hunt for dangers North and South, 
 " To prove my love, which sloth maligns !" 
 
 What seems to say her rosy mouth ? 
 
 " I'm not convinced by proofs but signs."
 
 211 
 
 LOVE IN IDLENESS. 
 
 i. 
 
 WHAT should I do ? In such a wife 
 
 Fortune had lavish'd all her store, 
 And nothing now seem'd left for life 
 
 But to deserve her more and more. 
 To this I vow'd my life's whole scope ; 
 
 And Love said, " I forewarn you now, 
 " The maiden will fulfil your hope 
 
 " Only as you fulfil your vow." 
 
 2. 
 
 A promised service, (task for days,) 
 Was done this morning while she slept 
 
 With that full heart which thinks no praise 
 Of vows which are not more than kept ; 
 
 P 2
 
 212 LOVE IN IDLENESS. 
 
 But loftier work did love impose, 
 
 And studious hours. Alas, for these, 
 
 While she from all my thoughts arose 
 Like Venus from the restless seas I 
 
 I conn'd a scheme, with mind elate : 
 
 My Uncle's land would fall to me, 
 My skill was much in school debate, 
 
 My friends were strong in Salisbury ; 
 A place in Parliament once gain'd, 
 
 Thro' saps first labour'd out of sight, 
 Far loftier peaks were then attain'd 
 
 With easy leaps from height to height ; 
 And that o'erwhelming honour paid, 
 
 Or recognised, at least, in life, 
 Which this most sweet and noble maid 
 
 Should yield to him who call'd her wife.
 
 LOVE IN IDLENESS. 213 
 
 4- 
 
 I fix'd this rule : in Sarum Close 
 
 To make two visits every week, 
 The first, to-day ; and, save on those, 
 
 I nought would do, think, read, or speak, 
 Which did not help my settled will 
 
 To earn the Statesman's proud applause. 
 And now, forthwith, to mend my skill 
 
 In ethics, politics, and laws, 
 The Statesman's learning ! Flush'd with power 
 
 And pride of freshly-form'd resolve, 
 I read Helvetius half-an-hour ; 
 
 But, halting in attempts to solve 
 Why, more than all thiugs else that be, 
 
 A lady's grace hath force to move 
 That sensitive appetency 
 
 Of intellectual good, call'd love, 
 Took Blackstone down, only to draw 
 
 My swift-deriving thoughts ere long
 
 214 LOVE IN IDLENESS. 
 
 To love, which is the source of law, 
 
 And, like a king, can do no wrong. 
 I open'd Hyde, where loyal hearts, 
 
 With faith unpropp'd by precedent, 
 Began to play rebellious parts. 
 
 O, mighty stir that little meant ! 
 How dull the crude plough' d-fields of fact 
 
 To me who trod the Elysian grove ! 
 How idle all heroic act 
 
 By the least suffering of love ! 
 I could not read ; so took my pen, 
 
 And thus commenced, in form of notes, 
 A Lecture for the Salisbury men, 
 
 With due regard to Tory votes : 
 " A road's a road, though worn to ruts ; 
 
 " They speed who travel straight therein 
 " But he who tacks and tries short cuts 
 
 " Gets fools' praise and a broken shin" 
 And here I stopp'd in sheer despair ; 
 
 But, what to-day was thus begxin,
 
 LOVE IN IDLENESS. 215 
 
 I vow'd, up starting from my chair, 
 To-morrow should indeed be done ; 
 
 So loosed my chafing thoughts from school, 
 To play with fancy as they chose, 
 
 And then, according to my rule, 
 I dress'd, and came to Sarum Close. 
 
 5- 
 
 Ah, that sweet laugh ! Diviner sense 
 
 Did Nature, forming her, inspire 
 To omit the grosser elements 
 
 And make her all of air and fire ! 
 
 6. 
 
 To-morrow, Cowes' Regatta fell : 
 The Dean would like his girls to go, 
 
 If I went too. " Most gladly." Well, 
 I di'd but break a foolish vow ! 
 
 Unless Love's toil has love for prize, 
 (And then he's Hercules), above
 
 2l6 LOVE IN IDLENESS. 
 
 All other contrarieties 
 
 Is labour contrary to love. 
 No fault of Love's, but nature's laws. 
 
 And Love, in idleness, lies quick ; 
 For as the worm whose powers make pause, 
 
 And swoon, through alteration sick, 
 The soul, its wingless state dissolved, 
 
 Awaits its nuptial-life complete, 
 All indolently self-convolved, 
 
 Cocoon'd in silken fancies sweet.
 
 217 
 
 CANTO Y. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 L 
 
 Rejected. 
 
 " PERHAPS she's dancing somewhere now !" 
 
 The thoughts of light and music wake 
 Sharp jealousies, that grow and grow 
 
 Till silence and the darkness ache. 
 He sees her step, so proud and gay, 
 
 Which, ere he spake, foretold despair; 
 Thus did she look, on such a day, 
 
 And such the fashion of her hair ; 
 And thus she stood, when, stooping low, 
 
 He took the bramble from her dress,
 
 2l8 PRELUDES. 
 
 And thus she laugh'd and talk'd, whose " No" 
 
 Was sweeter than another's " Yes," 
 He feeds on thoughts that most deject ; 
 
 He impudently feigns her charms, 
 So reverenced in his own respect, 
 
 Clasp'd dreadfully by other arms ; 
 And turns, and puts his brows, that ache, 
 
 Against the pillow where it's cold. 
 If only now his heart would break ! 
 
 But, oh, how much a heart can hold.
 
 PRELUDES. 219 
 
 II. 
 
 Rachel. 
 
 You loved her, and would lie all night 
 
 Thinking how beautiful she was, 
 And what to do for her delight. 
 
 Now both are bound with alien laws ! 
 Be patient ; put your heart to school ; 
 
 Weep if you will, but not despair; 
 The trust that nought goes wrong by rule 
 
 Should ease this load the many bear. 
 Love, if there's heav'n, shall meet his dues, 
 
 Though here unmatch'd, or match'd amiss ; 
 Meanwhile, the gentle cannot choose 
 
 But learn to love the lips they kiss. 
 Ne'er hurt the homely sister's ears 
 
 With Rachel's beauties; secret be 
 The lofty mind whose lonely tears 
 
 Protest against mortality.
 
 220 PRELUDES. 
 
 IIL 
 
 The Heart's Prophecies. 
 
 BE not amazed at life; 'tis still 
 The mode of God with his elect 
 
 Their hopes exactly to fulfil 
 
 In times and ways they least expect.
 
 THE QUEEN'S ROOM. 
 
 i. 
 
 THERE'S nothing happier than the days 
 
 In which young Love makes every thought 
 Pure as a bride's blush, when she says 
 
 " I will " unto she knows not what ; 
 And lovers, on the love-lit globe, - 
 
 For love's sweet sake, walk yet aloof, 
 And hear Time weave the marriage-robe, 
 
 Attraction warp and reverence woof ! 
 
 2. 
 My Housekeeper, my Nurse of yore, 
 
 Cried, as the latest carriage went, 
 "Well, Mr. Felix, Sir, I'm sure 
 
 " The morning's gone off excellent ! 
 " I never saw the show to pass 
 
 " The ladies, in their fine fresh gowns,
 
 222 THE QUEEXS ROOM. 
 
 " So sweetly dancing on the grass, 
 
 " To music with, its ups and downs. 
 " We'd such work, Sir, to clean the plate ; 
 
 " 'Twas just the busy times of old. 
 " The Queen's Room, Sir, look'd quite like state. 
 
 "Miss Smythe, when she went up, made bold 
 " To peep into the Rose Boudoir, 
 
 " And cried, 'How charming ! all quite new ;' 
 " And wonder'd who it could be for. 
 
 " All but Miss Honor look'd in too. 
 " But she's too proud to peep and pry. 
 
 " None's like that sweet Miss Honor, Sir ! 
 " Excuse my humbleness, but I 
 
 " Pray Heav'n you'll get a wife like her ! 
 " All poor folks love Miss Honor's ways 
 
 " Better than money. Mrs. Rouse, 
 "Who ought to know a lady, says 
 
 " No finer goes to Wilton House. 
 " Miss Bagshaw thought that dreary room 
 
 " Had kill'd old Mrs. Yaughan with fright ;
 
 THE QUEEN'S BOOM. 223 
 
 " She would not sleep in such a tomb 
 
 " For all her host was worth a night ! 
 " Miss Fry, Sir, laugh'd ; they talk'd the rest 
 
 " In French ; and French Sir's Greek to me. 
 " But, though they smiled, and seem'd to jest, 
 
 " No love was lost, for I could see 
 " How serious-like Miss Honor was" 
 
 " Well, Nurse, this is not my affair. 
 " The ladies talk'd in French with cause. 
 
 " Good-day ; and thank you for your prayer." 
 
 3- 
 
 I loiter'd through the vacant house, 
 
 Soon to be hers ; in one room stay'd, 
 Of old my mother's. Here my vo'ws 
 
 Of endless thanks were oftenest paid. 
 This room its first condition kept ; 
 
 For, on the road to Sarum Town, 
 Therein an English Queen had slept, 
 
 Before the Hurst was half pull'd down.
 
 224 THE QUEEN'S ROOM. 
 
 The pictured walls the place became : 
 
 Here ran the Brook Anaurus, where 
 Stout Jason bore the wrinkled dame 
 
 Whom serving changed to Juno ; there, 
 Ixion's selfish hope, instead 
 
 Of the nuptial goddess, clasp'd a cloud ; 
 And, here, translated Psyche fed 
 
 Her gaze on Love, not disallow'd. 
 
 And in this chamber had she been, 
 
 And into that she would not look, 
 My Joy, my Vanity, my Queen, 
 
 At whose dear name my pulses shook ! 
 To others how express at all 
 
 My worship in that joyful shrine ? 
 I scarcely can myself recall 
 
 What peace and ardour then were mine !
 
 THE QUEEN'S ROOM. 225 
 
 And how more sweet than aught below, 
 
 The daylight and its duties done, 
 It felt to fold the hands, and so 
 
 Relinquish all regards but one ; 
 To see her features in the dark, 
 
 To lie and meditate once more 
 The grace I did not fully mark, 
 
 The tone I had not heard before ; 
 And from my pillow then to take 
 
 Her notes, her picture, and her glove, 
 Put there for joy when I should wake, 
 
 And press them to the heart of lore ; 
 And then to whisper "Wife !" and pray 
 
 To live so long as not to miss 
 That unimaginable day 
 
 Which farther seems the nearer 'tis ; 
 And still from joy's unfathom'd well 
 
 To drink, in dreams, while on her brows 
 Of innocence ineffable 
 
 Blossom'd the laughing bridal rose.
 
 227 
 
 CANTO VI. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 c 
 
 I. 
 
 Love's Perversity. 
 
 How strange a thing a lover seems 
 
 To animals that do not love ! 
 Lo, where he walks and talks in dreams, 
 
 And flouts us with his Lady's glove ; 
 How foreign is the garb he wears ; 
 
 And how his great devotion mocks 
 Our poor propriety, and scares 
 
 The undevout with paradox ! 
 His soul, through scorn of worldly care, 
 
 And great extremes of sweet and gall, 
 
 Q 2
 
 228 PRELUDES. 
 
 And musing much on all that's fair, 
 
 Grows witty and fantastical ; 
 He sobs his joy and sings his grief, 
 
 And evermore finds such delight 
 In simply picturing his relief, 
 
 That 'plaining seems to cure his plight ; 
 He makes his sorrow, when there's none ; 
 
 His fancy blows both cold and hot ; 
 Next to the wish that she'll be won, 
 
 His first hope is that she may not j 
 He sues, yet deprecates consent ; 
 
 Would she be captured she must fly ; 
 She looks too happy and content, 
 
 For whose least pleasure he would die ; 
 Oh, cruelty, she cannot care 
 
 For one to whom she's always kind ! 
 He says he's nought, but, oh, despair, 
 
 If he's not Jove to her fond mind ! 
 He's jealous if she pets a dove, 
 
 She must be his with all her soul ;
 
 PRELUDES. 339 
 
 Yet 'tis a postulate in love 
 
 That part is greater than the whole, 
 And all his apprehension's stress, 
 
 When he's with her, regards her hair, 
 Her hand, a ribbon of her dress, 
 
 As if. his life were only there ; 
 Because she's constant, he will change, 
 
 And kindest glances coldly meet, 
 And, all the time he seems so strange, 
 
 His soul is fawning at her feet ; 
 Of smiles and simple heaven grown tired, 
 
 He wickedly provokes her tears, 
 And when she weeps, as he desired, 
 
 Falls slain with ecstacies of fears ; 
 He blames her, though she has no fault, 
 
 Except the folly to be his ; 
 He worships her, the more to exalt 
 
 The profanation of a kiss ; 
 Health's his disease ; he's never well 
 
 But when his paleness shames her rose ;
 
 230 PRELUDES. 
 
 His faith's a rock-built citadel, 
 
 Its sign a flag that each way blows ; 
 
 His o'erfed fancy frets and fumes ; 
 And Love, in him, is fierce like Hate, 
 
 And ruffles his ambrosial plumes 
 Against the bars of time and fate.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 II 
 
 The Power of Love. 
 
 SAMSON the Mighty, Solomon 
 
 The Wise, and Holy David aU 
 Must doff their crowns to Love, for none 
 
 But fell as Love would scorn to fall ! 
 And what may fallen spirits win, 
 
 When stripes and precepts cannot move ? 
 Only the sadness of all sin, 
 
 When look'd at in the light of Love. 
 
 231
 
 232 
 
 THE LOVE-LETTERS. 
 
 i. 
 
 " You ask, Will admiration halt, 
 
 " Should time divulge some hidden mote ? 
 " Oh, how I wish I knew that fault, 
 
 " That I, who do but love, might doat ! 
 " You who have stoop'd to my estate 
 
 " Will I so constantly admire, 
 " Yourself yourself shall emulate, 
 
 " And be yourself your own desire. 
 " I'll nobly mirror you too fair, 
 
 " And, when you're false to me your glass, 
 " What's wanting you'll by that repair, 
 
 " So bring yourself through me to pass. 
 " O Dearest, tell me how to prove 
 
 " Goodwill which cannot be express'd ;
 
 THE LOVE-LETTERS. 233 
 
 " The beneficial heart of love 
 
 " Is labour in an idle breast. 
 " Name in the world your chosen part, 
 
 " And here I vow, with all the bent 
 " And application of my heart 
 
 " To give myself to your content. 
 " Would you live on, home-worshipp'd, thus, 
 
 "Not proudly high nor poorly low ? 
 " Indeed the lines are fall'n to us 
 
 " In pleasant places ! Be it so. 
 " But would you others heav'nward move, 
 
 " By sight not faith, while you they admire ? 
 " I'll help with zeal, as I approve, 
 
 " That just and merciful desire. 
 " High as the lonely moon to view 
 
 " Til lift your light ; do you decree 
 " Your place, I'll win it ; for from you 
 
 " Command inspires capacity. 
 " Or, unseen, would you sway the world 
 
 " More surely ? Then in loftiest rhyme
 
 234 THE LOVE-LETTERS. 
 
 " I'll raise your emblem, fair unfurl'd 
 " With blessing in the breeze of time. 
 
 " Faith removes mountains, much more love ; 
 " Let your contempt abolish me 
 
 " If aught of your devisal prove 
 " Too hard or high to do or be." 
 
 2. 
 I ended. " From your Sweet-Heart, Sir," 
 
 Said Nurse, " The Dean's man brings it down." 
 I could have kiss'd both him and her ! 
 
 " Nurse, give him that, with half-a-crown." 
 How beat my heart, how paused my breath, 
 
 When, with perversely fond delay, 
 I broke the seal, that bore a wreath 
 
 Of roses link'd with one of bay. 
 
 3- 
 
 " I found your note. How very kind 
 " To leave it there ! I cannot tell
 
 THE LOVE-LETTERS. 235 
 
 " How happy I am, or how you find 
 
 " Words to express your thoughts so well. 
 " The Girls are going to the Ball 
 
 " At Wilton. If you can, Dear, come : 
 '* And every day this week you cal 
 
 " You'll find Papa and me at home. 
 " You said to Mary once I hope 
 
 " In jest that women should be vain : 
 " On Saturday your friend, (her Pope,) 
 
 " The Bishop dined with us again. 
 " She put the question, if they ought ? 
 
 " He turn'd it cleverly away, 
 " (For giddy Mildred cried, she thought 
 
 " We must,) with ' What we must we may.' 
 " Dear Papa laugh'd, and said 'twas sad 
 
 " To think how vain his girls would be, 
 " Above all Mary, now she had 
 
 " Episcopal authority. 
 " But I was very dull, dear friend, 
 
 " And went upstairs at last, and cried.
 
 236 THE LOVE-LETTERS. 
 
 " Be sure to come to-day, or send 
 . " A rose-leaf kiss'd on either side. 
 " Adieu ! I am not well. Last night 
 
 u My dreams were wild ; I often woke, 
 " The summer-lightning was so bright ; 
 
 " And when it flash'd I thought you spoke."
 
 237 
 
 CANTO VII. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Pearl. 
 
 SAY, Muse, who warblest at mine ear 
 
 That Prothalamium jubilant 
 Which I, in weakness and in fear, 
 
 Repeat, and of its glory scant, 
 Say, what of those who are not wives, 
 
 Nor have them ; tell what fate they prove 
 Who keep the pearl which happier lives 
 
 Cast in the costly cup of love ? 
 I answer, (for the sacred Muse 
 
 Is dumb,) " 111 chance is not for aye ;
 
 238 PRELUDES. 
 
 " But who with erring preference choose 
 
 " The sad and solitary way, 
 " And think peculiar praise to get 
 
 " In heaven, where error is not known, 
 " They have the separate coronet 
 
 " They sought, but miss a worthier crown. 
 " Virgins are they, before the Lord, 
 
 " Whose hearts are pure. The vestal fire 
 " Is not, as some misread the Word, 
 
 " By marriage quench'd, but flames the higher/
 
 PRELUDES. 239 
 
 II. 
 
 Joy and Use. 
 
 CAN aught compared with wedlock be 
 
 For use ? But He who made the heart 
 To use proportions joy. What He 
 
 Has join'd let no man put apart. 
 Sweet Order has its draught of bliss 
 
 Graced with the pearl of God's consent, 
 Ten times delightful in that 'tis 
 
 Considerate and innocent. 
 In vain Disorder grasps the cup ; 
 
 The pleasure's not enjoy'd but spilt, 
 And, if he stoops to lick it up, 
 
 It only tastes of earth and guilt. 
 His sorry raptures rest destroys; 
 
 To live, like comets, they must roam ; 
 On settled poles turn solid joys, 
 
 And sunlike pleasures shine at home.
 
 240 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 " She "was Mine." 
 
 " THY tears o'erprize thy loss ! Thy wife, 
 
 " In what was she particular ? 
 " Others of comely face and life, 
 
 " Others as chaste and warm there are, 
 " And when they speak they seem to sing ; 
 
 " Beyond her sex she was not wise ; 
 " And there is no more common thing 
 
 " Than kindness in a woman's eyes. 
 " Then wherefore weep so long and fast, 
 
 " Why so exceedingly repine ! 
 " Say, how has thy Beloved surpass'd 
 
 " So much all others?" " She was mine."
 
 PRELUDES. 2 4 I 
 
 IV. 
 
 Rods and Kisses. 
 
 ALL blessings ask a blessed mood ; 
 
 The garnish here is more than meat ; 
 Happy who takes sweet gratitude ; 
 
 Next best, though bitter, is regret. 
 'Tis well if, on the tempest's gloom, 
 
 You see the covenant of God ; 
 But far, far happier he on whom 
 
 The kiss works better than the rod.
 
 242 
 
 THE KEVULSIOK 
 
 i. 
 
 'TwAS when the spousal time of May 
 
 Hangs all the hedge with bridal wreaths, 
 And air's so sweet the bosom gay 
 
 Gives thanks for every breath it breathes, 
 When like to like is gladly moved, 
 
 And each thing joins in Spring's refrain, 
 " Let those love now, who never loved ; 
 
 " Let those who have loved love again ;" 
 That I, in whom the sweet time wrought, 
 
 Lay stretch'd within a lonely glade, 
 Abandon'd to delicious thought 
 
 Beneath the softly twinkling shade. 
 The leaves, all stirring, mimick'd well 
 
 A neighbouring rush of rivers cold, 
 And, as the sun or shadow fell, 
 
 So these were green and those were gold ;
 
 THE REVULSION. 243 
 
 In dim recesses hyacinths droop'd, 
 
 And breadths of primrose lit the air, 
 Which, wandering through the woodland, stoop'd 
 
 And gather'd perfumes here and there ; 
 Upon the spray the squirrel swung, 
 
 And careless songsters, six or seven, 
 Sang lofty songs the leaves among, 
 
 Fit for their only listener, Heaven. 
 I sigh'd, " Immeasurable bliss 
 
 " Gains nothing by becoming more ! 
 " Millions have meaning ; after this 
 
 " Cyphers forget the integer." 
 
 And so I mused, till musing brought 
 A dream that shook my house of clay, 
 
 And, in my humbled heart, I thought, 
 To me there yet may come a day 
 
 When o'er my head great waters roll, 
 And this poor hope is all I have 
 
 R 2
 
 244 THE REVULSION. 
 
 That faith, though helpless to console, 
 
 May still be strong enough to save ; 
 Aud this the single vestige seen 
 
 Of comfort, earthly or divine, 
 My sorrow some day must have been 
 
 Her portion, had it not been mine. 
 Then I, who knew, from watching life, 
 
 That blows foreseen are slow to fall, 
 Rehearsed the losing of a wife, 
 
 And faced its terrors each and all. 
 The self-chastising fancy show'd 
 
 The coffin with its ghastly breath ; 
 The innocent sweet face that owed 
 
 None of its innocence to death ; 
 The lips that used to laugh ; the knell 
 
 That bade the world beware of mirth ; 
 The heartless and intolerable 
 
 Indignity of " earth to earth ;" 
 At morn remembering by degrees 
 That she I dream'd about was dead ;
 
 THE REVULSION. 345 
 
 Love's still recurrent jubilees, 
 
 The days that she was born, won, wed ; 
 The duties of my life the same, 
 
 Their meaning for the feelings gone ; 
 Friendship impertinent, and fame 
 
 Disgusting ; and, more harrowing none, 
 Small household troubles fall'ii to me, 
 
 As, "What time would I dine to-day T 
 And, oh, how could I bear to see 
 
 Her noisy children at their play. 
 Besides, where all things limp and halt, 
 
 Could I go straight, should I alone 
 Have kept my love without default 
 
 Pitch'd at the true and heavenly tone ? 
 The festal-day might come to mind 
 
 That miss'd the gift which more endears ; 
 The hour which might have been more kind, 
 
 And now less fertile in vain tears ; 
 The good of common intercourse, 
 
 For daintier graces then despised,
 
 246 THE REVULSION. 
 
 Now with what passionate remorse, 
 
 What poignancy of hunger prized ! 
 The little wrong, now greatly rued, 
 
 Which no repentance now could right ; 
 And love, in disbelieving mood, 
 
 Deserting his celestial height. 
 Withal to know, God's love sent grief 
 
 To make me less the world's, and more 
 Meek-hearted ; ah, what sick relief ! 
 
 Why bow'd I not my heart before ? 
 
 3- 
 
 "0, Heaven," I cried, with chill alarm, 
 " If this fantastic horror shows 
 
 " The feature of an actual harm !" 
 
 And, coming straight to Sarum Close, 
 
 As one who dreams his wife is dead, 
 And cannot in his slumber weep,
 
 THE REVULSION. 247 
 
 And moans upon his wretched bed, 
 And wakes, and finds her there asleep, 
 
 And laughs and sighs, so I, not less 
 Relieved, beheld, with blissful start, 
 
 The light and happy loveliness 
 Which lay so heavy on my heart.
 
 249 
 
 CANTO VIII. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 In Love. 
 
 IF he's capricious she'll be so, 
 
 But, if his duties constant are, 
 She lets her loving favour glow 
 
 As steady as a tropic star ; 
 Appears there nought for which to weep, 
 
 She'll weep for nought, for his dear sake 
 She clasps her sister in her sleep ; 
 
 Her love in dreams is most awake.
 
 25O PRELUDES. 
 
 Her soul, that once with pleasure shook, 
 
 Did any eyes her beauty own, 
 Now wonders how they dare to look 
 
 On what belongs to him alone ; 
 The indignity of taking gifts 
 
 Exhilarates her loving breast ; 
 A rapture of submission lifts 
 
 Her life into celestial rest ; 
 There's nothing left of what she was ; 
 
 Back to the babe the woman dies, 
 And all the wisdom that she has 
 
 Is to love him for being wise. 
 She's confident because she fears; 
 
 And, though discreet when he's away, 
 If none but her dear despot hears, 
 
 She prattles like a child at play. 
 Perchance, when all her praise is said. 
 
 He tells the news, a battle won, 
 On either side ten thousand dead. 
 
 " Alas !" she says ; but, if 'twere known,
 
 PRELUDES. 251 
 
 She thinks, " He's looking on my face ! 
 
 " I am his joy ; whate'er I do, 
 " He sees such time-contenting grace 
 
 " In that, he'd have me always so !" 
 And, evermore, for cither's sake, 
 
 To the sweet folly of the dove, 
 She joins the cunning of the snake, 
 
 To rivet and exalt his love ; 
 Her mode of candour is deceit ; 
 
 And what she thinks from what she'll say, 
 (Although I'll never call her cheat), 
 
 Lies far as Scotland from Cathay. 
 Without his knowledge he was won ; 
 
 Against his nature kept devout ; 
 She'll never tell him how 'twas done, 
 
 And he will never find it out. 
 If, sudden, he suspects her wiles, 
 
 And hears her forging chain and trap, 
 And looks, she sits in simple smiles, 
 
 Her two hands lying in her lap.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 Her secret, (privilege of the Bard, 
 
 Whose fancy is of either sex,) 
 Is mine; but let the darkness guard 
 
 Myst'ries that light would more perplex !
 
 PRELUDES. 353 
 
 II. 
 
 Love Thinking. 
 
 \VHAT lifts her in my thought so far 
 
 Beyond all else 1 Let Love not err ! 
 "Tis that which all right women are, 
 
 But which I'll know in none but her. 
 She is to me the only Ark 
 
 Of that high mystery which locks 
 The lips of joy, or speaks in dark 
 
 Enigmas and in paradox ; 
 That potent charm, which none can fly, 
 
 Nor would, which makes me bond and free, 
 Nor can I tell if first 'twas I 
 
 Chose it, or it elected me ; 
 Which, when I look intentest, lo, 
 
 Cheats most mine eyes, albeit my heart, 
 Content to feel and not to know, 
 
 Perceives it all in every part ;
 
 254 PKELUDES. 
 
 I kiss its cheek ; its life divine 
 
 Exhales from its resplendent shroud ; 
 Ixion's fate reversed is mine, 
 
 Authentic Juno seems a cloud ; 
 I feel a blessed warmth, I see 
 
 A bright circumference of rays, 
 But darkness, where the sun should be, 
 
 Fills admiration with amaze ; 
 And when, for joy's relief, I think 
 
 To fathom with the line of thought 
 The well from which I, blissful, drink, 
 
 The spring's so deep I come to nought.
 
 PRELUDES. 255 
 
 III. 
 
 The Kiss. 
 
 " I SAW you take his kiss ! " " 'Tis true." 
 " 0, modesty ! " " 'Twas strictly kept : 
 
 " He thought me asleep ; at least, I knew 
 " He thought I thought he thought I slept."
 
 256 
 
 THE KOH-I-NOOR. 
 
 i. 
 
 " BE man's hard virtues highly wrought, 
 
 " But let my gentle Mistress be, 
 " In every look, word, deed, and thought, 
 
 " Nothing but sweet and womanly ! 
 " Her virtues please my virtuous mood, 
 
 " But what at all times I admire 
 " Is, not that she is wise or good, 
 
 "But just the thing which I desire. 
 " With versatility to bring 
 
 " Her mental tone to any strain, 
 " If oft'nest she is anything, 
 
 " Be it thoughtless, talkative, and vain. 
 " That seems in her supremest grace 
 
 " Which, virtue or not, apprises me 
 " That my familiar thoughts embrace 
 
 " Unfathomable mystery."
 
 THE KOH-I-NOOR. 257 
 
 2. 
 
 I answer'd thus ; for she desired 
 
 To know what mind I most approved 
 
 Partly to learn what she inquired, 
 Partly to get the praise she loved. 
 
 I praised her, but no praise could fill 
 
 The depths of her desire to please, 
 Though dull to others as a Will 
 
 To them that have no legacies. 
 The more I praised the more she shone, 
 
 Her eyes incredulously bright, 
 And all her happy beauty blown 
 
 Beneath the beams of my delight. 
 Sweet rivalry was thus begot ; 
 
 By turns, my speech, in passion's style, 
 With flatteries the truth o'ershot, 
 
 And she surpass'd them with her smila 
 
 s
 
 258 THE KOH-I-NOOR. 
 
 4- 
 
 " You have my heart so sweetly seized, 
 
 " And I confess, nay, 'tis my pride 
 " That I'm with you so solely pleased, 
 
 " That, if I'm pleased with aught beside, 
 " As music, or the month of June, 
 
 " My friend's devotion, or his wit, 
 " A rose, a rainbow, or the moon, 
 
 " It is that you illustrate it. 
 " All these are parts where you're the whole ! 
 
 " You fit the taste for Paradise, 
 " To which your charms draw up the soul 
 
 " As turning spirals draw the eyes. 
 " Nature to you was more than kind ; 
 
 " 'Twas fond perversity to dress 
 " So much simplicity of mind 
 
 " In such a pomp of loveliness ! 
 " But, praising you, the fancy deft 
 
 " Flies wide, and lets the quarry stray, 
 " And when all's said, there's something left, 
 
 " And that's the thing I meant to say."
 
 THE KOH-I-NOOR. 259 
 
 " Dear Felix!" "Sweet, sweet Love!" But there 
 
 Was Aunt Maude's noisy ring and knock ! 
 " Stay, Felix ; you have caught my hair. 
 
 " Stoop ! Thank you ! " " May I have that lock? " 
 " Not now. Good morning, Aunt ! " "Why, Puss, 
 
 " You look magnificent to-day." 
 " Here's Felix, Aunt." " Fox and green goose ! 
 
 " Who handsome gets should handsome pay.' 
 " Aunt, you are friends ! " " Ah, to be sure ! 
 
 " Good morning ! Go on flattering, Sir ; 
 " A woman's like the Koh-i-noor, 
 
 " Worth just the price that's put on her.' 
 
 s 2
 
 26l 
 
 CANTO IX. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Gracious Chivalry. 
 
 I DO and ever shall profess 
 
 That I more tenderly revere 
 A woman in her gentleness 
 
 Than all things else I love or fear ; 
 But false to love and ladies he 
 
 Who, scarf on arm and spear in rest, 
 Assail'd the world with proof that she, 
 
 Being his, was also nature's best. 
 That chivalry do I proclaim 
 
 Alone substantial, wise, and good,
 
 262 PRELUDES. 
 
 Which scorns to help one woman's fame 
 
 With treason against all womanhood. 
 Each maid, (albeit to me my own 
 
 Appears and is past others rare,) 
 Where aptness makes her beauty known 
 
 May seem as singularly fair ; 
 And each is justly most desired ; 
 
 And no true knight will care to prove 
 That there is more of what's admired 
 
 In his than in another's love.
 
 PRELUDES. 263 
 
 II. 
 
 The Nursling of Civility. 
 
 Lo, how the woman once was woo'd : 
 
 Forth leapt the savage from his lair, 
 And fell'd her, and to nuptials rude 
 
 He dragg'd her, bleeding, by the hair. 
 From that to Chloe's dainty wiles 
 
 And Portia's dignified consent, 
 What distance ! But these Pagan styles 
 
 How far below Time's fair intent ! 
 Siegfried sued Kriemhild. Sweeter life 
 
 Could Love's self covet 1 Ballads teach 
 In what rough sort he chid his wife 
 
 For want of curb upon her speech ! 
 Shall Love, where last I leave him, halt ] 
 
 Nay ; none can fancy or foresee 
 To how strange bliss may time exalt 
 
 This nursling of civility.
 
 264 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 Love Liberal. 
 
 THOUGH bonded unto one, my best, 
 
 My faith to whom is joy and ease, 
 Shall I despise or shun the rest 
 
 Of nature's queens and priestesses 1 
 Rather by loving one I learn 
 
 To love her like, who still recall 
 My nuptial pale, and teach in turn 
 
 That faith to one is debt to all ; 
 For I'm not of so dull a wit 
 
 As not to know that what I admire 
 And the sweet joy of loving it 
 
 Would both be slain by false desire. 
 Therefore, though singly hers till death, 
 
 (And after, I hope,) with all I'm free, 
 Inhaling love's delighted breath 
 
 In the bright air of chastity.
 
 PRELUDES. 265 
 
 IV. 
 
 Disappointment. 
 
 " THE bliss which woman's charms bespeak, 
 I've sought in many, found in none !" 
 
 " In many 'tis in vain you seek 
 What only can be found in one."
 
 266 
 
 THE FRIENDS. 
 
 i. 
 
 FRANK'S long, dull letter, lying by 
 
 The gay sash from Hoaoria's waist, 
 Reproach' d me ; passion spared a sigh 
 
 For friendship without fault disgraced. 
 How should I greet him ? how pretend 
 
 I felt the love he once inspired 1 
 Time was when either, in his friend, 
 
 His own deserts with joy admired ; 
 We took one side in school-debate, 
 
 Like hopes pursued with equal thirst, 
 Were even-bracketed by Fate, 
 
 Twin- Wranglers, seventh from the First ; 
 And either loved a lady's laugh 
 
 More than all music ; he and I 
 Were perfect in the pleasant half 
 
 Of universal charity.
 
 THE FRIENDS. 267 
 
 2. 
 
 From pride of likeness thus I loved 
 
 Him, and he me, till love begot 
 The lowliness which now approved 
 
 Nothing but that which I was not. 
 Blest was the pride of feeling so 
 
 Subjected to a girl's soft reign! 
 She was my vanity, and, oh, 
 
 All other vanities how vain ! 
 
 3- 
 
 Frank follow'd in his letter's track, 
 
 And set my guilty heart at ease 
 By paying my excuses back 
 
 With just the same apologies. 
 So he had slighted me as well ! 
 
 Like fortune also paved the way 
 For what I sought excuse to tell. 
 
 He dined at Wilton yesterday, 
 He said, and met Miss Churchill there : 
 
 Save one, none lovelier had he seen !
 
 268 THE FRIENDS. 
 
 " You said the Wiltshire girls were fair, 
 
 " But never mention'd her, their queen." 
 How sweet to hear him praise her charms ! 
 
 For love, like faith, however sure, 
 With slightest confirmation warms, 
 
 And feels its great assurance more ! 
 " Have you not heard then ? She and I, 
 
 " Grant Heav'n we both may live so long, 
 " Are to be married next July. 
 
 " Is she not lovely ! I did wrong 
 "Never to tell you, Frank" But he, 
 
 Showing a miniature, turn'd red. 
 " Charming !" I cried ; and Frank, " You'll be 
 " My Groom's-man, Yaughan ? In June we 
 wed." 
 
 4- 
 Each, rapturous, praised his lady's worth ; 
 
 He eloquently thus : " Her face 
 " Is the summ'd sweetness of the earth, 
 
 "Her soul the glass of heaven's grace,
 
 THE FRIENDS. 269 
 
 " To which she leads me by the hand ; 
 
 " Or, briefly all the truth to say 
 " To you, who briefly understand, 
 
 " She is both heaven and the way. 
 " She charms with manners pure and high, 
 
 " The fruit of an ancestral tree, 
 " And a devout life, govern' d by 
 
 " The rubric of civility ; 
 " Displeasures and resentments pass 
 
 " Athwart her charitable eyes 
 " More fleetingly than breath from glass, 
 
 " Or truth from foolish memories ; 
 " Her heart's so touch'd with others' woes 
 
 " She has no need of chastisement ; 
 " Her gentle life's conditions close, 
 
 " Like God's commandments, with content, 
 " And make an aspect calm and gay, 
 
 " Where sweet affections come and go, 
 " Till all who see her, smile, and say, 
 
 " ' How fair, and happy that she's so I' 
 " She is so lovely, true, and pure, 
 
 " Her virtue all virtue so endears,
 
 THE FRIENDS,, 
 
 " That often, when I think of her, 
 
 " Life's meanness fills mine eyes with tears"- 
 " You paint Miss Churchill ! Pray go on" 
 
 "She's perfect, and, if joy was much 
 " To think her nature's paragon, 
 
 " 'Tis more that there's another such !" 
 
 5- 
 
 Praising and paying back the praise 
 
 Of our sweet girls, t'ward Sarum Spire 
 We walk'd, in evening's golden haze, 
 
 Friendship from passion stealing fire. 
 In joy's crown danced the feather jest, 
 
 And, parting by the Deanery door, 
 Clasp'd hands, less shy than words, confess'd 
 
 We had not been true friends before.
 
 2 7 I 
 
 CANTO X. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Last Niht at Home. 
 
 0, MUSE, who dost to me reveal 
 
 The mystery of the woman's life, 
 Relate how 'tis a maid might feel, 
 
 The night before she's crown'd a wife ! 
 Lo, sleepless in her little bed, 
 
 She lies and counts the hours till noon. 
 Ere this, to-morrow, she'll be wed, 
 
 Ere this ? Alas, how strangely soon ! 
 A fearful blank of ignorance 
 
 Lies, manifest, across her way,
 
 2^2 PRELUDES. 
 
 And shadows, cast from unknown chance, 
 
 Make sad and dim the coming day. 
 Her faithless dread she now discards, 
 And now remorseful memory flings 
 Its glory round the last regards 
 
 Of home and all accustom'd things. 
 Her father's voice, her mother's eyes 
 
 Accuse her treason ; 'tis in vain 
 She thinks herself a wife, and tries 
 
 To comprehend the greater gain ; 
 Her unknown fortune nothing cheers 
 
 Her loving heart's familiar loss, 
 And torrents of repentant tears 
 
 Their hot and smarting threshold cross. 
 When first within her bosom Love 
 
 Took birth, and beat his blissful wings, 
 It seem'd to lift her mind above 
 
 All care for other earthly things; 
 But, oh, too lightly did she vow 
 
 To leave for aye her happy nest ; 
 And dreadful is the thought that now 
 
 Assaults her weak and shaken breast :
 
 PRELUDES. 273 
 
 Ah, should her lover's love abate ; 
 
 Ah, should she, miserable, lose 
 All dear regards of maiden state, 
 
 Dissolved by time and marriage dues ! 
 And so her fears increase, till fear 
 
 O'erfilms her apprehensive eye 
 That she may swoon, with no one near, 
 
 And haply so, unmarried, die. 
 With instinct of her ignorance, 
 
 (The virgin's strength and veiled guide,) 
 She prays, and casts the reins of chance 
 
 To Love, nor recks what shall betide.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 II. 
 
 Frost in Harvest. 
 
 THE lover who, across a gulf 
 
 Of ceremony, views his Love, 
 And dares not yet address herself, 
 
 Pays worship to her stolen glove. 
 The gulf o'erleapt, the lover wed, 
 
 It happens oft, (let truth be told,) 
 The halo leaves the sacred head, 
 
 Respect grows lax, and worship cold, 
 And all love's May-day promising, 
 
 Like songs of birds before they pair, 
 Or flush of flowers in boastful Spring, 
 
 Dies out, and leaves the Summer bare. 
 Yet should a man, it seems to me, 
 
 Honour what honourable is, 
 For some more honourable plea 
 
 Than only that it is not his.
 
 PRELUDES. 375 
 
 The gentle wife, who decks his board 
 
 And makes his day to have no night, 
 Whose wishes wait upon her lord, 
 
 Who finds her own in his delight, 
 Is she another now than she 
 
 Who, mistress of her maiden charms, 
 At his wild prayer, incredibly 
 
 Committed them to his proud arms ? 
 Unless her choice of him's a slur 
 
 Which makes her proper credit dim, 
 He never enough can honour her 
 
 Who past all speech has honour'd him. 
 
 T 2
 
 276 PBELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 The Foreign Land. 
 
 A WOMAN is a foreign land, 
 
 Of which, though there he settle young, 
 A man will ne'er quite understand 
 
 The customs, politics, and tongue. 
 The foolish hie them post-haste through, 
 
 See fashions odd, and prospects fair, 
 Learn of the language, " How d'ye do," 
 
 And go and brag that they've been there. 
 The most for leave to trade apply, 
 
 For once, at Empire's seat, her heart, 
 Then get what knowledge ear and eye 
 
 Glean chancewise in the life-long mart. 
 And certain others, few and fit, 
 
 Attach them to the Court, and see 
 The Country's best, its accent hit, 
 
 And partly sound its polity.
 
 PRELUDES. 277 
 
 IV. 
 
 A Demonstration. 
 
 NATURE, with endless being rife, 
 
 Parts each thing into " him" and " her," 
 And in the arithmetic of life, 
 
 The smallest unit is a pair; 
 And thus, oh, strange, sweet half of me, 
 
 If I confess a loftier flame, 
 If more I love high Heaven than thee, 
 
 I more than love thee, thee I am ; 
 And, if the world's not built of lies, 
 
 Nor all a cheat the Gospel tells, 
 If that which from the dead shall rise 
 
 Be I indeed, not something else, 
 There's no position more secure 
 
 In reason or in faith than this, 
 That those conditions must endure, 
 
 Which, wanting, I myself should miss.
 
 278 PRELUDES. 
 
 Felicity. 
 
 To marry her and take her home ! 
 
 The poet, painting pureness, tells 
 Of lilies ; figures power by Rome ; 
 
 And each thing shows by something else 
 But through the songs of poets look, 
 
 And who so happy to have found 
 In universal nature's book 
 
 A likeness for a life so crown'd ! 
 Here they speak best who best express 
 
 Their inability to speak, 
 And none are strong, but who confess 
 
 With happy skill that they are weak.
 
 PRELUDES. 
 
 VI. 
 
 Marriage Indissoluble. 
 
 " IN heaven none marry." Grant the most 
 
 Which may by this vague word be meant, 
 Who shall forbid the eternal boast, 
 
 " I kiss'd those lips with her consent !" 
 If here, to love, past favor is 
 
 A present boast, delight, and chain, 
 What lacks of honor, bond, and bliss, 
 
 Where Now and Then are no more twain ! 
 
 279
 
 280 
 
 THE EPITAPH, 
 i. 
 
 " AT Church, in twelve hours more, we meet '. 
 
 This, Dearest, is our last farewell." 
 " Oh, Felix, do you love me ?" " Sweet, 
 
 Why do you ask ?" I cannot teU." 
 
 2. 
 
 And was it no vain fantasy 
 
 That raised me from the earth with pride ? 
 Should I to-morrow verily 
 
 Be Bridegroom, and Honoria Bride ? 
 Should I, in simple fact, henceforth 
 
 Live unconditionally lord 
 Of her whose smile for brightest worth 
 
 Seem'd all too bountiful reward 1
 
 THE EPITAPH. 281 
 
 Live one with her I worshipp'd, chain'd 
 
 By links indissolubly wrought ? 
 Oh, bliss too much for bliss ; it strainM 
 
 The feelings and oppress'd the thought. 
 Incredible life's promise seem'd, 
 
 Or, credible, for life too great ; 
 Love his own deity blasphemed, 
 
 And dofTd at last his heavenly state. 
 What force, if man could mount so high, 
 
 To further insolence set bars, 
 Ajid kept the chaste moon in the sky, 
 
 And bade him not tread out the stars ! 
 
 Patience and hope had parted truce, 
 And, sun-like, love obscured his ray 
 
 With dazzling mists, driven up profuse 
 Before his own triumphant way. 
 
 But should I thus neglect my pledge 
 Still to maintain love's stately mood ?
 
 282 THE EPITAPH. 
 
 (Remembering haste is sacrilege 
 
 In heaven !) For peace in vain I sued. 
 I thought with prayer how Jacob paid 
 
 The patient price of Rachel ; then, 
 Of that pure grace Tobias said, 
 
 And Sarah's innocent " Amen." 
 Without avail ! Overwhelming wealth, 
 
 The wondrous gift of God so near, 
 Which should have been delight and health, 
 
 Made heart and spirit sick and sere. 
 
 4- 
 But Heav'n, who often grants us nought, 
 
 Till, weary, we have ceased to ask, 
 Absolved me now from restless thought, 
 
 And put aside the cloudy mask. 
 The self-forgetting soul of love, 
 
 That recks not of its own delight, 
 Like morning bade the mists remove, 
 
 And then once more I breathed aright j
 
 THE EPITAPH. 283 
 
 And I rehears'd my marriage vow, 
 
 And swore her welfare to prefer 
 To all things, and for aye as now 
 
 To live, not for myself, but her. 
 Forth, from the glittering spirit's peace 
 
 And gaiety ineffable, 
 Stream'd to the heart delight and ease, 
 
 As from an overflowing well ; 
 And, orderly deriving thence 
 
 Its pleasure perfect and allow'd, 
 Bright with the spirit shone the sense, 
 
 As with the sun a fleecy cloud. 
 If now to part with her could make 
 
 Her pleasure greater/sorrow less, 
 I for my epitaph would take 
 
 " To serve seem'd more than to possess." 
 And I perceived, (the vision sweet 
 
 Dimming with happy dew mine eyes,) 
 That love and joy are torches lit 
 
 From altar-fires of sacrifice.
 
 THE EPITAPH. 
 5- 
 
 Across the sky the daylight crept, 
 
 And birds grew garrulous iu. the grove, 
 
 And on my marriage-morn I slept 
 A soft sleep, undisturb'd by love.
 
 . ..... 285 
 
 CANTO XL 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 Platonic Lovs. 
 
 RIGHT art thou who wouldst rather be 
 
 A doorkeeper in Love's fair house, 
 Than lead the wretched revelry 
 
 Where fools at swinish troughs carouse. 
 But do not boast of being least ; 
 
 And if to kiss thy Mistress' skirt 
 Amaze thy brain, scorn not the Priest 
 
 Whom greater honours do not hurt. 
 Stand off and gaze, if more than this 
 
 Be more than thou canst understand,
 
 286 PRELUDES. 
 
 Revering him whose power of bliss, 
 
 Angelic, dares to seize her hand, 
 Or whose seraphic love makes flight 
 
 To the apprehension of her lips ; 
 And think, the sun of such delight 
 
 From thine own shadow takes eclipse. 
 And, wouldst thou to the same aspire, 
 
 This is the art thou must employ, 
 Live rightly ; so shalt thou acquire 
 
 Unknown capacities of joy.
 
 PRELUDES. 287 
 
 II. 
 
 The Symbol. 
 
 As if I chafed the sparks from glass, 
 
 And said, " It lightens," hitherto 
 The songs I've made of love may pass 
 
 For all but for proportion true ; 
 But likeness and proportion both 
 
 Now fail, as if a child in glee, 
 Catching the flakes of the salt froth, 
 
 Cried, " Look, my mother, here's the sea.' 
 Yet, by the help of what's so weak, 
 
 But not diverse, to those who know, 
 And only unto those I speak, 
 
 May far-inferring fancy show 
 Love's living sea by coasts uncurb'd, 
 
 Its depth, its mystery, and its might, 
 Its indignation if disturb'd, 
 
 The glittering peace of its delight.
 
 288 PRELUDES. 
 
 III. 
 
 Love of Loves. 
 
 " THE man seeks first to please his wife," 
 
 Declares, but not complains, Saint Paul ; 
 And other loves have little life 
 
 Where she's not loved the most of all. 
 "We cannot weigh or measure love ; 
 
 And this excess, assure you well, 
 If sinful, is a sin whereot 
 
 Only the best are capable.
 
 PRELUDES. 389 
 
 IV. 
 
 Constancy rewarded. 
 
 I VOW'D unvarying faith, and she, 
 
 To whom in full I pay that vow, 
 Rewards me with variety 
 
 Which men who change can never know.
 
 THE WEDDING. 
 
 i. 
 
 LIFE smitten with a feverish chill, 
 
 The brain too tired to understand, 
 In apathy of heart and will, 
 
 I took the woman from the hand 
 Of him who stood for God, and heard 
 
 Of Christ, and of the Church his Bride ; 
 The Feast, by presence of the Lord 
 
 And his first Wondei', beautified ; 
 The mystic sense to Christian men ; 
 
 The bonds in innocency made, 
 And gravely to be enter'd then 
 
 For children, godliness, and aid, 
 And honour'd, and kept free from smirch ; 
 
 And how a man must love his wife 
 No less than Christ did love his Church, 
 
 If need be, giving her his life ;
 
 THE WEDDING. 29 1 
 
 And, vowing then the mutual vow, 
 The tongne spake, but intention slept. 
 
 Tis well for us Heaven asks not how 
 This oath is sworn, but how 'tis kept. 
 
 2. 
 
 0, bold seal of a bashful bond, 
 
 Which makes the marriage-day to be, 
 
 To those before it and beyond, 
 An ice-berg in an Indian sea ! 
 
 " Now, while she's changing," said the Dean, 
 
 " Her bridal for her travelling dress, 
 " I'll preach allegiance to your queen ! 
 
 " Preaching's the trade which I profess ; 
 " And one more minute's mine ! You know 
 
 " I've paid my girl a father's debt, 
 " And this last charge is all I owe. 
 
 " She's yours ; but I love more than yet 
 
 U 2
 
 292 THE WEDDING. 
 
 " You can ; such fondness only wakes 
 
 " When time has raised the heart above 
 " The prejudice of youth, which makes 
 
 " Beauty conditional to love. 
 " Prepare to meet the weak alarms 
 
 " Of novel nearness ; recollect 
 " The eye which magnifies her charms 
 
 " Is microscopic for defect. 
 " Fear comes at first ; but soon, rejoiced, 
 
 " You'll find your strong and tender loves 
 " Like holy rocks by Druids poised, 
 
 " The least force shakes, but none removes. 
 " Although you smile, there's much to mend ! 
 
 " Yet never girl, I think, had less. 
 " Her worst point is, she's apt to spend 
 
 " Too much on alms-deeds and on dress. 
 " Her strength is your esteem ; beware 
 
 " Of finding fault ; her will's tmnerv'd 
 " By blame ; from you 'twould be despair ; 
 
 " But praise that is not quite deserv'd
 
 THE WEDDING. 593 
 
 " Will all her noble nature move 
 
 " To make your utmost wishes true. 
 " Yet think, while mending thus your Love, 
 
 " Of matching her ideal too ! 
 " The death of nuptial joy is sloth : 
 
 " To keep your mistress in your wife, 
 " Keep to the very height your oath, 
 
 " And honour her with arduous life. 
 " Lastly, no personal reverence doff. 
 
 " Life's all externals unto those 
 " Who pluck the blushing petals off, 
 
 " To find the secret of the rose. 
 " How long she's staying ! Green's Hotel 
 
 " I'm sure you'll like. The charge is fair, 
 " The wines good. I remember well 
 
 " I stopp'd once, with her mother, there. 
 " A tender conscience of her vow 
 
 " That mother had ! She is so like her !" 
 But Mrs. Fife, much flurried, now 
 
 Whisper'd, " Miss Honor's ready, Sir."
 
 294 THE WEDDING. 
 
 "Adieu, dear, dear Papa, adieu ! 
 
 " To-morrow I'll write." " No, Pet, " " I will ! 
 " You know I'm very happy ; and you 
 
 " Have Mary and Mildred with you still ! 
 " Mary, you'll make Papa his tea 
 
 " At eight exactly. Aii revoir ! 
 " Only six weeks ! How soon 'twill be !" 
 
 Then on us two they shut the door. 
 
 5- 
 I, disconcerted, tax'd my thought 
 
 To keep my Bride in countenance, 
 But, whilst for words I vainly sought, 
 
 Her voice released my own from trance. 
 " Look, is not this a lovely shawl ?" 
 
 "Yes!" " Aunt Maude gave it me." "How kind?" 
 " The new wing spoils Sir John's old Hall : 
 
 "You'll see it, if you pull that blind."
 
 THE WEDDING. 295 
 
 6. 
 
 I drew the silk : in heaven the night 
 
 Was dawning ; lovely Venus shone, 
 In languishment of tearful light, 
 
 Swathed by the red breath of the sun.
 
 297 
 
 CANTO XII. 
 
 PRELUDES. 
 I. 
 
 The Married Lover. 
 
 WHY, having won her, do I woo ? 
 
 Because her spirit's vestal grace 
 Provokes me always to pursue, 
 
 But, spirit-like, eludes embrace ; 
 Because her womanhood is such 
 
 That, as on court-days subjects kiss 
 The Queen's hand, yet so near a touch 
 
 Affirms no mean familiarness, 
 
 ** 
 
 Nay, rather marks more fair the height 
 Which can with safety so neglect 
 
 To dread, as lower ladies might, 
 
 That grace could meet with disrespect,
 
 2p8 PRELUDES. 
 
 Thus she with happy favour feeds 
 
 Allegiance from a love so high 
 That thence no false conceit proceeds 
 
 Of difference bridged, or state put by ; 
 Because although in act and word 
 
 As lowly as a wife can be, 
 Her manners, when they call me lord, 
 
 Remind me 'tis by courtesy, 
 Not with her least consent of will, 
 
 Which would my proud affection hurt, 
 But by the noble style that still 
 
 Imputes an unattain'd desert ; 
 Because her gay and lofty brows, 
 
 When all is won which hope can ask, 
 Reflect a light of hopeless snows 
 
 That bright in virgin ether bask ; 
 Because, though free of the outer court 
 
 I am, this Temple keeps its shrine 
 Sacred to Heaven ; because, in short, 
 
 She's not and never shall be mine.
 
 PRELUDES. 299 
 
 IL 
 
 The Amaranth. 
 
 FEASTS satiate ; stars disrtess with height ; 
 
 Friendship means well, but misses reach, 
 And wearies in its best delight, 
 
 Vex'd with the vanities of speech ; 
 Too long regarded, roses even 
 
 Afflict the mind with fond unrest ; 
 And to converse direct with Heaven 
 
 Is a great labour in the breast ; 
 Whate'er the up-looking soul admires, 
 
 Whate'er the senses' banquet be, 
 Fatigues at last with vain desires, 
 
 Or sickens by satiety ; 
 But truly my delight was more 
 
 In her to whom I'm bound for aye 
 Yesterday than the day before 
 
 And more to-day than yesterday.
 
 3 PRELUDES. 
 
 i 
 
 III. 
 
 The Neglected Glove. 
 
 " THE badge you begg'd, your wooing done, 
 Lo, thus flung by !" He answers, " Love," 
 
 Kissing her fingers one by one, 
 
 " Who has the hand neglects the glove."
 
 HUSBAND AND WIFE. 
 
 i. 
 
 I, WHILE the shop-girl fitted on 
 
 The sand-shoes, look'd where, down the bay, 
 The sea glow'd with a shrouded sun. 
 
 " I'm ready, Felix ; will you pay?" 
 That was my first expense for this 
 
 Sweet stranger whom I call'd my wife. 
 How light the touches are that kiss 
 
 The music from the chords of life ! 
 
 2. 
 
 Her feet, by half-a-mile of sea, 
 
 In spotless sand left shapely prints ; 
 With agates, then, she loaded me, 
 
 (The lapidary call'd them flints) ; 
 Then, at her wish, I hail'd a boat, 
 
 To take her to the ships-of-war, 
 At anchor, each a lazy mote 
 
 Black in the brilliance, miles from shore.
 
 302 HUSBAND AND WIPE. 
 
 3- 
 
 The morning breeze the canvas fill'd, 
 
 Lifting us o'er the bright-ridged gulf, 
 And every lurch my darling thrill'd 
 
 With light fear smiling at itself; 
 And, dashing past the Arrogant, 
 
 Asleep upon the restless wave 
 After its cruise in the Levant, 
 
 We reach'd the Wolf, and signal gave 
 For help to board ; with caution meet, 
 
 My bride was placed within the chair, 
 The red flag wrapp'd about her feet, 
 
 And so swung laughing through the air. 
 
 "Look, Love," she said, "there's Frederick 
 Graham, 
 
 " My cousin, whom you met, you know." 
 And seeing us, the brave man came, 
 
 And made his frank and courteous bow,
 
 HUSBAND AND WIFE. 303 
 
 And gave my hand a sailor's shake, 
 
 And said, " You ask'd me to the Hurst : 
 " I never thought my luck would make 
 
 " You and your wife my guests the first." 
 And Honor, cruel, " Nor did we : 
 
 " Have you not lately changed your ship ?" 
 " Yes : I'm commander, now," said he, 
 
 With a slight quiver of the lip. 
 We saw the vessel, shown with pride ; 
 
 Took luncheon ; I must eat his salt ! 
 Parting he said, (I fear my bride 
 
 Found him unselfish to a fault,) 
 His wish, he saw, had come to pass, 
 
 (And so, indeed, her face express'd,) 
 That that should be, whatever 'twas, 
 
 Which made his Cousin happiest. 
 We left him looking from above ; 
 
 Rich bankrupt ! for he could afford 
 To say most proudly that his love 
 
 Was virtue and its own reward. 
 But others loved as well as he, 
 
 (Thought I, half-anger'd,) and if fate,
 
 304 HUSBAND AND WIFE. 
 
 Unfair, had only fashion'd me 
 As hapless, I had been as great. 
 
 As souls, ambitious, but low-born, 
 
 If raised past hope by luck or wit, 
 All pride of place will proudly scorn, 
 
 And live as they'd been used to it, 
 So we two wore our strange estate; 
 
 Familiar, unaffected, free, 
 We talk'd, until the dusk grew late, 
 
 Of this and that ; but, after tea, 
 As doubtful if a lot so sweet 
 
 As ours was ours in very sooth, 
 Like children, to promote conceit, 
 
 We feign'd that it was not the truth ; 
 And she assumed the maiden coy, 
 
 And I adored remorseless charms, 
 And then we clapp'd our hands for joy, 
 
 And ran into each other's arms.
 
 35 
 
 THE EPILOGUE. 
 
 i. 
 
 " AH, dearest wife, a fresh-lit fire 
 
 " Sends forth to heaven great shows of fume, 
 " And watchers, far away, admire ; 
 
 " But when the flames their power assume, 
 " The more they burn the less they show, 
 
 " The clouds no longer smirch the sky, 
 " And then the flames intensest glow 
 
 " When far-off watchers think they die. 
 " The fumes of early love my verse 
 
 " Has figured " " You must paint the flame !' 
 " 'T would merit the Promethean curse ! 
 
 " But now, Sweet, for your praise and blame." 
 " You speak too boldly ; veils are due 
 
 " To women's feelings." " Fear not this ! 
 
 x
 
 306 THE EPILOGUE. 
 
 " Women will vow I say not true, 
 
 " And men believe the lips they kiss." 
 " I did not call you ' Dear' or ' Love,' 
 
 " I think, till after Frank was born." 
 " That fault I cannot well remove ; 
 
 " The rhymes" but Frank now blew his horn. 
 And Walter bark'd on hands and knees, 
 
 At Baby in the mignionette, 
 And all made, full-cry, for the trees 
 
 Where Felix and his wife were set. 
 Again, disturb'd, (crickets have cares !) 
 
 True to their annual use they rose, 
 To offer thanks at Evening Prayers 
 
 In three times sacred Sarum Close. 
 
 2. 
 
 Passing, they left a gift of wine 
 
 At Widow Neale's. Her daughter said : 
 
 " 0, Ma'am, she's sinking ! For a sign, 
 " She cried just now, of him that's dead,
 
 THE EPILOGUE. 307 
 
 " ' Mary, he's somewhere close above, 
 
 " ' Weeping and wailing his dead wife, 
 " 'With forceful prayers and fatal love 
 
 " ' Conjuring me to come to life. 
 " ' A spirit is terrible though dear ! 
 
 " ' It comes by night, and sucks my breath, 
 " ' And draws me with desire and fear.' 
 
 "Ah, Ma'am, she'll soon be his in death !" 
 
 Vaughan, when his kind wife's eyes were dry, 
 
 Said, "This thought crosses me, my Dove ; 
 " If Heaven should proffer, when we die, 
 
 " Some unconceived, superior love, 
 " How take the exchange without despair, 
 
 " Without worse folly how refuse V 
 But she, who, wise as she was fair, 
 
 For subtle doubts had simple clues, 
 Said, " Custom sanctifies, and faith 
 
 "Is more than joy ; we'll not desiro
 
 308 THE EPILOGUE. 
 
 " In any heaven a different path, 
 
 . " Though, found at first, it had been higher. 
 " Yet love makes death a dreadful thought ! 
 
 " Felix, at what a price we live !" 
 But present pleasures soon forgot 
 
 The future's dread alternative ; 
 For, as became the festal time, 
 
 He cheer'd her heart with tender praise, 
 And speeches wanting only rhyme 
 
 To make them like his gallant lays. 
 He discommended girlhood, " What 
 
 " For sweetness like the ten-years' wife, 
 "Whose customary love is not 
 
 " Her passion, or her play, but life ! 
 " With beauties so maturely fair, 
 
 " Affecting, mild, and manifold, 
 " May girlish charms no more compare 
 
 " Than apples green with apples gold. 
 " Ah, still unpraised Honoria, Heaven, 
 
 " When you into my arms it gave, 
 " Left nought hereafter to be given 
 
 " But grace to feel the good I have."
 
 THE EPILOGUE. 309 
 
 4- 
 
 Her own and manhood's modesty 
 
 Made dumb her love, but, as they rode, 
 His hand in hers felt soft reply, 
 
 And like rejoinder fond bestow'd ; 
 And, when the carriage -set them down, 
 
 " How strange," said he, " 'twould seem to meet, 
 " When pacing, as we now this town, 
 
 " A Florence or a Lisbon street, 
 " That Laura or that Catherine, who, 
 
 " In the remote, romantic years, 
 " From Petrarch or Camoens drew 
 
 " Their verse and their immortal tears !" 
 But here their converse had its end ; 
 
 For, crossing the Cathedral Lawn, 
 There came an ancient college-friend, 
 
 Who, introduced to Mrs. Vaughan, 
 Lifted his hat, and bow'd and smiled, 
 
 And fill'd her handsome face with joy, 
 By patting on the cheek her child, 
 
 With, " Is he yours, this noble boy T
 
 NOTE. 
 
 I AM indebted, for some appropriate thoughts, chiefly embodied 
 in lines 23 40 of " Love's Perversity," to the prose essay, by 
 Robert Waring, called Effigies Amoris. I have also to express 
 my gratitude, rather, however, for the corroboration than sug- 
 gestion of some others, to the Author of Delicice sapientice de 
 amore conjugali. The concluding sentence of the piece called 
 "The Pearl, "is from Herrick.
 
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