The Angel In The House. Book I. Canto VIII.

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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,
  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.


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 lifetime each;
  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.

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!


IV 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.

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.


Sarum Plain.

I
  Breakfast enjoy'd, 'mid hush of boughs
  And perfumes thro' the windows blown;
  Brief worship done, which still endows
  The day with beauty not its own;
  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 grays
  Below the hill, and walk'd the rest.

II
  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 earth's familiar zone,
  She moved; how feeling and how fair
  For others' 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.
  I could not else than grieve. What cause?
  Was I not blest? Was she not there?
  Likely my own? Ah, that it was:
  How like seem'd ‘likely’ to despair!

III
  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.
  So much it was as now to walk,
  And humbly by her gentle side
  Observe her smile and hear her talk,
  Could it be more to call her Bride?
  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, the thought smote, like a knife,
  How laps'd mortality had numb'd
  The feelings to the feast of life;
  How passing good breathes sweetest breath;
  And love itself at highest reveals
  More black than bright, commending death
  By teaching how much life conceals.

IV
  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;
  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.

V
  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 harebells, 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 scowl'd their chill gloom from above,
  Like churls whose stolid wisdom mocks
  The lightness of immortal love.
  And, as we talk'd, my spirit quaff'd
  The sparkling winds; the candid skies
  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.

© Coventry Kersey Dighton Patmore