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 a woman's gentleness;
  For thus I think, if one I see
   Who disappoints my high desire,
   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, perhaps, 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.
   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 unscathed 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.
II Aurea Dicta 
   'Tis truth (although this truth's a star
   Too deep-enskied for all to see),
   As poets of grammar, lovers are
   The fountains 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.
   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 spectator too.
   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
  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.
 II
  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.
 III
  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;
  I 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 offence
  Was patent to the dreaming eye
  And heavenly tact of innocence,
  And did for fear my fear defy,
  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.
 IV
  Nor was my hope that night made less,
  Though order'd, humbled, and reproved;
  Her farewell did her heart express
  As much, but not with anger, moved.
  My trouble had my soul betray'd;
  And, in the night of my despair,
  My love, a flower of noon afraid,
  Divulged its fulness unaware.
  I saw she saw; and, O 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.


 



