The Victories Of Love. Book I

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I
From Frederick Graham

  Mother, I smile at your alarms!
  I own, indeed, my Cousin's charms,
  But, like all nursery maladies,
  Love is not badly taken twice.
  Have you forgotten Charlotte Hayes,
  My playmate in the pleasant days
  At Knatchley, and her sister, Anne,
  The twins, so made on the same plan,
  That one wore blue, the other white,
  To mark them to their father's sight;
  And how, at Knatchley harvesting,
  You bade me kiss her in the ring,
  Like Anne and all the others? You,
  That never of my sickness knew,
  Will laugh, yet had I the disease,
  And gravely, if the signs are these:

  As, ere the Spring has any power,
  The almond branch all turns to flower,
  Though not a leaf is out, so she
  The bloom of life provoked in me;
  And, hard till then and selfish, I
  Was thenceforth nought but sanctity 
  And service: life was mere delight
  In being wholly good and right,
  As she was; just, without a slur;
  Honouring myself no less than her;
  Obeying, in the loneliest place,
  Ev'n to the slightest gesture, grace
  Assured that one so fair, so true,
  He only served that was so too.
  For me, hence weak towards the weak,
  No more the unnested blackbird's shriek
  Startled the light-leaved wood; on high
  Wander'd the gadding butterfly,
  Unscared by my flung cap; the bee,
  Rifling the hollyhock in glee,
  Was no more trapp'd with his own flower,
  And for his honey slain. Her power,
  From great things even to the grass
  Through which the unfenced footways pass,
  Was law, and that which keeps the law,
  Cherubic gaiety and awe;
  Day was her doing, and the lark
  Had reason for his song; the dark
  In anagram innumerous spelt
  Her name with stars that throbb'd and felt;
  'Twas the sad summit of delight
  To wake and weep for her at night;
  She turn'd to triumph or to shame
  The strife of every childish game;
  The heart would come into my throat
  At rosebuds; howsoe'er remote,
  In opposition or consent,
  Each thing, or person, or event,
  Or seeming neutral howsoe'er,
  All, in the live, electric air,
  Awoke, took aspect, and confess'd
  In her a centre of unrest, 
  Yea, stocks and stones within me bred
  Anxieties of joy and dread.

  O, bright apocalyptic sky
  O'erarching childhood! Far and nigh
  Mystery and obscuration none,
  Yet nowhere any moon or sun!
  What reason for these sighs? What hope,
  Daunting with its audacious scope
  The disconcerted heart, affects
  These ceremonies and respects?
  Why stratagems in everything?
  Why, why not kiss her in the ring?
  'Tis nothing strange that warriors bold,
  Whose fierce, forecasting eyes behold
  The city they desire to sack,
  Humbly begin their proud attack
  By delving ditches two miles off,
  Aware how the fair place would scoff
  At hasty wooing; but, O child,
  Why thus approach thy playmate mild?

  One morning, when it flush'd my thought
  That, what in me such wonder wrought
  Was call'd, in men and women, love,
  And, sick with vanity thereof,
  I, saying loud, ‘I love her,’ told
  My secret to myself, behold
  A crisis in my mystery!
  For, suddenly, I seem'd to be
  Whirl'd round, and bound with showers of threads
  As when the furious spider sheds
  Captivity upon the fly
  To still his buzzing till he die;
  Only, with me, the bonds that flew,
  Enfolding, thrill'd me through and through
  With bliss beyond aught heaven can have
  And pride to dream myself her slave. 

  A long, green slip of wilder'd land,
  With Knatchley Wood on either hand,
  Sunder'd our home from hers. This day
  Glad was I as I went her way.
  I stretch'd my arms to the sky, and sprang
  O'er the elastic sod, and sang
  ‘I love her, love her!’ to an air
  Which with the words came then and there;
  And even now, when I would know
  All was not always dull and low,
  I mind me awhile of the sweet strain
  Love taught me in that lonely lane.

  Such glories fade, with no more mark
  Than when the sunset dies to dark.
  They pass, the rapture and the grace
  Ineffable, their only trace
  A heart which, having felt no less
  Than pure and perfect happiness,
  Is duly dainty of delight;
  A patient, poignant appetite
  For pleasures that exceed so much
  The poor things which the world calls such,
  That, when these lure it, then you may
  The lion with a wisp of hay.

  That Charlotte, whom we scarcely knew
  From Anne but by her ribbons blue,
  Was loved, Anne less than look'd at, shows
  That liking still by favour goes!
  This Love is a Divinity,
  And holds his high election free
  Of human merit; or let's say,
  A child by ladies call'd to play,
  But careless of their becks and wiles,
  Till, seeing one who sits and smiles
  Like any else, yet only charms,
  He cries to come into her arms. 
  Then, for my Cousins, fear me not!
  None ever loved because he ought.
  Fatal were else this graceful house,
  So full of light from ladies' brows.
  There's Mary; Heaven in her appears
  Like sunshine through the shower's bright tears;
  Mildred's of Earth, yet happier far
  Than most men's thoughts of Heaven are;
  But, for Honoria, Heaven and Earth
  Seal'd amity in her sweet birth.
  The noble Girl! With whom she talks
  She knights first with her smile; she walks,
  Stands, dances, to such sweet effect,
  Alone she seems to move erect.
  The brightest and the chastest brow
  Rules o'er a cheek which seems to show
  That love, as a mere vague suspense
  Of apprehensive innocence,
  Perturbs her heart; love without aim
  Or object, like the sunlit flame
  That in the Vestals' Temple glow'd,
  Without the image of a god.
  And this simplicity most pure
  She sets off with no less allure
  Of culture, subtly skill'd to raise
  The power, the pride, and mutual praise
  Of human personality
  Above the common sort so high,
  It makes such homely souls as mine
  Marvel how brightly life may shine.
  How you would love her! Even in dress
  She makes the common mode express
  New knowledge of what's fit so well
  'Tis virtue gaily visible!
  Nay, but her silken sash to me
  Were more than all morality, 
  Had not the old, sweet, feverous ill
  Left me the master of my will!

  So, Mother, feel at rest, and please
  To send my books on board. With these,
  When I go hence, all idle hours
  Shall help my pleasures and my powers.
  I've time, you know, to fill my post,
  And yet make up for schooling lost
  Through young sea-service. They all speak
  German with ease; and this, with Greek,
  (Which Dr. Churchill thought I knew,)
  And history, which I fail'd in too,
  Will stop a gap I somewhat dread,
  After the happy life I've led
  With these my friends; and sweet 'twill be
  To abridge the space from them to me.


II
From Mrs. Graham

  My Child, Honoria Churchill sways
  A double power through Charlotte Hayes.
  In minds to first-love's memory pledged
  The second Cupid's born full-fledged.
  I saw, and trembled for the day
  When you should see her beauty, gay
  And pure as apple-blooms, that show
  Outside a blush and inside snow,
  Her high and touching elegance
  Of order'd life as free as chance.
  Ah, haste from her bewitching side,
  No friend for you, far less a bride! 
  But, warning from a hope so wild,
  I wrong you. Yet this know, my Child:
  He that but once too nearly hears
  The music of forefended spheres,
  Is thenceforth lonely, and for all
  His days like one who treads the Wall
  Of China, and, on this hand, sees
  Cities and their civilities,
  And, on the other, lions. Well,
  (Your rash reply I thus foretell,)
  Good is the knowledge of what's fair,
  Though bought with temporal despair!
  Yes, good for one, but not for two.
  Will it content a wife that you
  Should pine for love, in love's embrace,
  Through having known a happier grace;
  And break with inward sighs your rest,
  Because, though good, she's not the best?
  You would, you think, be just and kind,
  And keep your counsel! You will find
  You cannot such a secret keep;
  'Twill out, like murder, in your sleep;
  A touch will tell it, though, for pride,
  She may her bitter knowledge hide;
  And, while she accepts love's make-believe,
  You'll twice despise what you'd deceive.

  I send the books. Dear Child, adieu!
  Tell me of all you are and do.
  I know, thank God, whate'er it be,
  'Twill need no veil 'twixt you and me.


III
From Frederick

  The multitude of voices blythe
  Of early day, the hissing scythe
  Across the dew drawn and withdrawn,
  The noisy peacock on the lawn,
  These, and the sun's eye-gladding gleam,
  This morning, chased the sweetest dream
  That e'er shed penitential grace
  On life's forgetful commonplace;
  Yet 'twas no sweeter than the spell
  To which I woke to say farewell.

  Noon finds me many a mile removed
  From her who must not be beloved;
  And us the waste sea soon shall part,
  Heaving for aye, without a heart!
  Mother, what need to warn me so?
  I love Miss Churchill? Ah, no, no.
  I view, enchanted, from afar,
  And love her as I love a star,
  For, not to speak of colder fear,
  Which keeps my fancy calm, I hear,
  Under her life's gay progress hurl'd,
  The wheels of the preponderant world,
  Set sharp with swords that fool to slay
  Who blunders from a poor byway,
  To covet beauty with a crown
  Of earthly blessing added on;
  And she's so much, it seems to me,
  Beyond all women womanly,
  I dread to think how he should fare
  Who came so near as to despair.


IV
From Frederick

  Yonder the sombre vessel rides
  Where my obscure condition hides.
  Waves scud to shore against the wind
  That flings the sprinkling surf behind;
  In port the bickering pennons show
  Which way the ships would gladly go;
  Through Edgecumb Park the rooted trees
  Are tossing, reckless, in the breeze;
  On top of Edgecumb's firm-set tower,
  As foils, not foibles, of its power,
  The light vanes do themselves adjust
  To every veering of the gust:
  By me alone may nought be given
  To guidance of the airs of heaven?
  In battle or peace, in calm or storm,
  Should I my daily task perform,
  Better a thousand times for love,
  Who should my secret soul reprove?

  Beholding one like her, a man
  Longs to lay down his life! How can
  Aught to itself seem thus enough,
  When I have so much need thereof?
  Blest in her place, blissful is she;
  And I, departing, seem to be
  Like the strange waif that comes to run
  A few days flaming near the sun,
  And carries back, through boundless night,
  Its lessening memory of light.

  Oh, my dear Mother, I confess
  To a deep grief of homelessness, 
  Unfelt, save once, before. 'Tis years
  Since such a shower of girlish tears
  Disgraced me? But this wretched Inn,
  At Plymouth, is so full of din,
  Talkings and trampings to and fro.
  And then my ship, to which I go
  To-night, is no more home. I dread,
  As strange, the life I long have led;
  And as, when first I went to school,
  And found the horror of a rule
  Which only ask'd to be obey'd,
  I lay and wept, of dawn afraid,
  And thought, with bursting heart, of one
  Who, from her little, wayward son,
  Required obedience, but above
  Obedience still regarded love,
  So change I that enchanting place,
  The abode of innocence and grace
  And gaiety without reproof,
  For the black gun-deck's louring roof,
  Blind and inevitable law
  Which makes light duties burdens, awe
  Which is not reverence, laughters gain'd
  At cost of purities profaned,
  And whatsoever most may stir
  Remorseful passion towards her,
  Whom to behold is to depart
  From all defect of life and heart.

  But, Mother, I shall go on shore,
  And see my Cousin yet once more!
  'Twere wild to hope for her, you say.
  l've torn and cast those words away.
  Surely there's hope! For life 'tis well
  Love without hope's impossible;
  So, if I love, it is that hope
  Is not outside the outer scope 
  Of fancy. You speak truth: this hour
  I must resist, or lose the power.
  What! and, when some short months are o'er,
  Be not much other than before?
  Drop from the bright and virtuous sphere
  In which I'm held but while she's dear?
  For daily life's dull, senseless mood,
  Slay the fine nerves of gratitude
  And sweet allegiance, which I owe
  Whether the debt be weal or woe?
  Nay, Mother, I, forewarn'd, prefer
  To want for all in wanting her.

  For all? Love's best is not bereft
  Ever from him to whom is left
  The trust that God will not deceive
  His creature, fashion'd to believe
  The prophecies of pure desire.
  Not loss, not death, my love shall tire.
  A mystery does my heart foretell;
  Nor do I press the oracle
  For explanations. Leave me alone,
  And let in me love's will be done.


V
From Frederick

  Fashion'd by Heaven and by art
  So is she, that she makes the heart
  Ache and o'erflow with tears, that grace
  So lovely fair should have for place,
  (Deeming itself at home the while,)
  The unworthy earth! To see her smile 
  Amid this waste of pain and sin,
  As only knowing the heaven within,
  Is sweet, and does for pity stir
  Passion to be her minister:
  Wherefore last night I lay awake,
  And said, ‘Ah, Lord, for Thy love's sake,
  Give not this darling child of Thine
  To care less reverent than mine!’
  And, as true faith was in my word,
  I trust, I trust that I was heard.

  The waves, this morning, sped to land,
  And shouted hoarse to touch the strand,
  Where Spring, that goes not out to sea,
  Lay laughing in her lovely glee;
  And, so, my life was sunlit spray
  And tumult, as, once more to-day,
  For long farewell did I draw near
  My Cousin, desperately dear.
  Faint, fierce, the truth that hope was none
  Gleam'd like the lightning in the sun;
  Yet hope I had, and joy thereof.
  The father of love is hope, (though love
  Lives orphan'd on, when hope is dead,)
  And, out of my immediate dread
  And crisis of the coming hour,
  Did hope itself draw sudden power.
  So the still brooding storm, in Spring,
  Makes all the birds begin to sing.

  Mother, your foresight did not err:
  I've lost the world, and not won her.
  And yet, ah, laugh not, when you think
  What cup of life I sought to drink!
  The bold, said I, have climb'd to bliss
  Absurd, impossible, as this,
  With nought to help them but so great
  A heart it fascinates their fate. 
  If ever Heaven heard man's desire,
  Mine, being made of altar-fire,
  Must come to pass, and it will be
  That she will wait, when she shall see,
  This evening, how I go to get,
  By means unknown, I know not yet
  Quite what, but ground whereon to stand,
  And plead more plainly for her hand!

  And so I raved, and cast in hope
  A superstitious horoscope!
  And still, though something in her face
  Portended ‘No!’ with such a grace
  It burthen'd me with thankfulness,
  Nothing was credible but ‘Yes.’
  Therefore, through time's close pressure bold,
  I praised myself, and boastful told
  My deeds at Acre; strain'd the chance
  I had of honour and advance
  In war to come; and would not see
  Sad silence meant, ‘What's this to me.’

  When half my precious hour was gone,
  She rose to greet a Mr. Vaughan;
  And, as the image of the moon
  Breaks up, within some still lagoon
  That feels the soft wind suddenly,
  Or tide fresh flowing from the sea,
  And turns to giddy flames that go
  Over the water to and fro,
  Thus, when he took her hand to-night,
  Her lovely gravity of light
  Was scatter'd into many smiles
  And flattering weakness. Hope beguiles
  No more my heart, dear Mother. He,
  By jealous looks, o'erhonour'd me.

  With nought to do, and fondly fain
  To hear her singing once again, 
  I stay'd, and turn'd her music o'er;
  Then came she with me to the door.
  ‘Dearest Honoria,’ I said,
  (By my despair familiar made,)
  ‘Heaven bless you!’ Oh, to have back then stepp'd
  And fallen upon her neck, and wept,
  And said, ‘My friend, I owe you all
  ‘I am, and have, and hope for. Call
  ‘For some poor service; let me prove
  ‘To you, or him here whom you love,
  ‘My duty. Any solemn task,
  ‘For life's whole course, is all I ask!’
  Then she must surely have wept too,
  And said, ‘My friend, what can you do!’
  And I should have replied, ‘I'll pray
  ‘For you and him three times a-day,
  ‘And, all day, morning, noon, and night,
  ‘My life shall be so high and right
  ‘That never Saint yet scaled the stairs
  ‘Of heaven with more availing prayers!’
  But this (and, as good God shall bless
  Somehow my end, I'll do no less,)
  I had no right to speak. Oh, shame,
  So rich a love, so poor a claim!

  My Mother, now my only friend,
  Farewell. The school-books which you send
  I shall not want, and so return.
  Give them away, or sell, or burn.
  I'll write from Malta. Would I might
  But be your little Child to-night,
  And feel your arms about me fold,
  Against this loneliness and cold!


VI
From Mrs. Graham

  The folly of young girls! They doff
  Their pride to smooth success, and scoff
  At far more noble fire and might
  That woo them from the dust of fight!

  But, Frederick, now the storm is past,
  Your sky should not remain o'ercast.
  A sea-life's dull, and, oh, beware
  Of nourishing, for zest, despair.
  My Child, remember, you have twice
  Heartily loved; then why not thrice,
  Or ten times? But a wise man shuns
  To cry ‘All's over,’ more than once.
  I'll not say that a young man's soul
  Is scarcely measure of the whole
  Earthly and heavenly universe,
  To which he inveterately prefers
  The one beloved woman. Best
  Speak to the senses' interest,
  Which brooks no mystery nor delay:
  Frankly reflect, my Son, and say,
  Was there no secret hour, of those
  Pass'd at her side in Sarum Close,
  When, to your spirit's sick alarm,
  It seem'd that all her marvellous charm
  Was marvellously fled? Her grace
  Of voice, adornment, movement, face
  Was what already heart and eye
  Had ponder'd to satiety;
  And so the good of life was o'er,
  Until some laugh not heard before, 
  Some novel fashion in her hair,
  Or style of putting back her chair,
  Restored the heavens. Gather thence
  The loss-consoling inference.

  Yet blame not beauty, which beguiles,
  With lovely motions and sweet smiles,
  Which while they please us pass away,
  The spirit to lofty thoughts that stay
  And lift the whole of after-life,
  Unless you take the vision to wife,
  Which then seems lost, or serves to slake
  Desire, as when a lovely lake
  Far off scarce fills the exulting eye
  Of one athirst, who comes thereby,
  And inappreciably sips
  The deep, with disappointed lips.
  To fail is sorrow, yet confess
  That love pays dearly for success!
  No blame to beauty! Let's complain
  Of the heart, which can so ill sustain
  Delight. Our griefs declare our fall,
  But how much more our joys! They pall
  With plucking, and celestial mirth
  Can find no footing on the earth,
  More than the bird of paradise,
  Which only lives the while it flies.

  Think, also, how 'twould suit your pride
  To have this woman for a bride.
  Whate'er her faults, she's one of those
  To whom the world's last polish owes
  A novel grace, which all who aspire
  To courtliest custom must acquire.
  The world's the sphere she's made to charm,
  Which you have shunn'd as if 'twere harm.
  Oh, law perverse, that loneliness
  Breeds love, society success! 
  Though young, 'twere now o'er late in life
  To train yourself for such a wife;
  So she would suit herself to you,
  As women, when they marry, do.
  For, since 'tis for our dignity
  Our lords should sit like lords on high,
  We willingly deteriorate
  To a step below our rulers' state;
  And 'tis the commonest of things
  To see an angel, gay with wings,
  Lean weakly on a mortal's arm!
  Honoria would put off the charm
  Of lofty grace that caught your love,
  For fear you should not seem above
  Herself in fashion and degree,
  As in true merit. Thus, you see,
  'Twere little kindness, wisdom none,
  To light your cot with such a sun.


VII
From Frederick

  Write not, my Mother, her dear name
  With the least word or hint of blame.
  Who else shall discommend her choice,
  I giving it my hearty voice?
  Wed me? Ah, never near her come
  The knowledge of the narrow home!
  Far fly from her dear face, that shows
  The sunshine lovelier than the rose,
  The sordid gravity they wear
  Who poverty's base burthen bear! 
  (And all are poor who come to miss
  Their custom, though a crown be this.)
  My hope was, that the wheels of fate,
  For my exceeding need, might wait,
  And she, unseen amidst all eyes,
  Move sightless, till I sought the prize,
  With honour, in an equal field.
  But then came Vaughan, to whom I yield
  With grace as much as any man,
  In such cause, to another can.
  Had she been mine, it seems to me
  That I had that integrity
  And only joy in her delight—
  But each is his own favourite
  In love! The thought to bring me rest
  Is that of us she takes the best.

  'Twas but to see him to be sure
  That choice for her remain'd no more!
  His brow, so gaily clear of craft;
  His wit, the timely truth that laugh'd
  To find itself so well express'd;
  His words, abundant yet the best;
  His spirit, of such handsome show
  You mark'd not that his looks were so;
  His bearing, prospects, birth, all these
  Might well, with small suit, greatly please;
  How greatly, when she saw arise
  The reflex sweetness of her eyes
  In his, and every breath defer
  Humbly its bated life to her;
  Whilst power and kindness of command,
  Which women can no more withstand
  Than we their grace, were still unquell'd,
  And force and flattery both compell'd
  Her softness! Say I'm worthy. I
  Grew, in her presence, cold and shy. 
  It awed me, as an angel's might
  In raiment of reproachful light.
  Her gay looks told my sombre mood
  That what's not happy is not good;
  And, just because 'twas life to please,
  Death to repel her, truth and ease
  Deserted me; I strove to talk,
  And stammer'd foolishness; my walk
  Was like a drunkard's; if she took
  My arm, it stiffen'd, ached, and shook:
  A likely wooer! Blame her not;
  Nor ever say, dear Mother, aught
  Against that perfectness which is
  My strength, as once it was my bliss.

  And do not chafe at social rules.
  Leave that to charlatans and fools.
  Clay graffs and clods conceive the rose,
  So base still fathers best. Life owes
  Itself to bread; enough thereof
  And easy days condition love;
  And, kindly train'd, love's roses thrive,
  No more pale, scentless petals five,
  Which moisten the considerate eye
  To see what haste they make to die,
  But heavens of colour and perfume,
  Which, month by month, renew the bloom
  Of art-born graces, when the year
  In all the natural grove is sere.

  Blame nought then! Bright let be the air
  About my lonely cloud of care.


VIII
From Frederick

  Religion, duty, books, work, friends,—
  'Tis good advice, but there it ends.
  I'm sick for what these have not got.
  Send no more books: they help me not;
  I do my work: the void's there still
  Which carefullest duty cannot fill.
  What though the inaugural hour of right
  Comes ever with a keen delight?
  Little relieves the labour's heat;
  Disgust oft crowns it when complete;
  And life, in fact, is not less dull
  For being very dutiful.
  ‘The stately homes of England,’ lo,
  ‘How beautiful they stand!’ They owe
  How much to nameless things like me
  Their beauty of security!
  But who can long a low toil mend
  By looking to a lofty end?
  And let me, since 'tis truth, confess
  The void's not fill'd by godliness.
  God is a tower without a stair,
  And His perfection, love's despair.
  'Tis He shall judge me when I die;
  He suckles with the hissing fly
  The spider; gazes calmly down,
  Whilst rapine grips the helpless town.
  His vast love holds all this and more.
  In consternation I adore.
  Nor can I ease this aching gulf
  With friends, the pictures of myself. 

  Then marvel not that I recur
  From each and all of these to her.
  For more of heaven than her have I
  No sensitive capacity.
  Had I but her, ah, what the gain
  Of owning aught but that domain!
  Nay, heaven's extent, however much,
  Cannot be more than many such;
  And, she being mine, should God to me
  Say ‘Lo! my Child, I give to thee
  All heaven besides,’ what could I then,
  But, as a child, to Him complain
  That whereas my dear Father gave
  A little space for me to have
  In His great garden, now, o'erblest,
  I've that, indeed, but all the rest,
  Which, somehow, makes it seem I've got
  All but my only cared-for plot.
  Enough was that for my weak hand
  To tend, my heart to understand.

  Oh, the sick fact, 'twixt her and me
  There's naught, and half a world of sea.


IX
From Frederick

  In two, in less than two hours more
  I set my foot on English shore,
  Two years untrod, and, strange to tell,
  Nigh miss'd through last night's storm! There fell
  A man from the shrouds, that roar'd to quench
  Even the billows' blast and drench. 
  Besides me none was near to mark
  His loud cry in the louder dark,
  Dark, save when lightning show'd the deeps
  Standing about in stony heaps.
  No time for choice! A rope; a flash
  That flamed as he rose; a dizzy splash;
  A strange, inopportune delight
  Of mounting with the billowy might,
  And falling, with a thrill again
  Of pleasure shot from feet to brain;
  And both paced deck, ere any knew
  Our peril. Round us press'd the crew,
  With wonder in the eyes of most.
  As if the man who had loved and lost
  Honoria dared no more than that!

  My days have else been stale and flat.
  This life's at best, if justly scann'd,
  A tedious walk by the other's strand,
  With, here and there cast up, a piece
  Of coral or of ambergris,
  Which, boasted of abroad, we ignore
  The burden of the barren shore.
  I seldom write, for 'twould be still
  Of how the nerves refuse to thrill;
  How, throughout doubly-darken'd days,
  I cannot recollect her face;
  How to my heart her name to tell
  Is beating on a broken bell;
  And, to fill up the abhorrent gulf,
  Scarce loving her, I hate myself.

  Yet, latterly, with strange delight,
  Rich tides have risen in the night,
  And sweet dreams chased the fancies dense
  Of waking life's dull somnolence.
  I see her as I knew her, grace
  Already glory in her face; 
  I move about, I cannot rest,
  For the proud brain and joyful breast
  I have of her. Or else I float,
  The pilot of an idle boat,
  Alone, alone with sky and sea,
  And her, the third simplicity.
  Or Mildred, to some question, cries,
  (Her merry meaning in her eyes,)
  ‘The Ball, oh, Frederick will go;
  ‘Honoria will be there!’ and, lo,
  As moisture sweet my seeing blurs
  To hear my name so link'd with hers,
  A mirror joins, by guilty chance,
  Either's averted, watchful glance!
  Or with me, in the Ball-Room's blaze,
  Her brilliant mildness thrids the maze;
  Our thoughts are lovely, and each word
  Is music in the music heard,
  And all things seem but parts to be
  Of one persistent harmony.
  By which I'm made divinely bold;
  The secret, which she knows, is told;
  And, laughing with a lofty bliss
  Of innocent accord, we kiss;
  About her neck my pleasure weeps;
  Against my lip the silk vein leaps;
  Then says an Angel, ‘Day or night,
  ‘If yours you seek, not her delight,
  ‘Although by some strange witchery
  ‘It seems you kiss her, 'tis not she;
  ‘But, whilst you languish at the side
  ‘Of a fair-foul phantasmal bride,
  ‘Surely a dragon and strong tower
  ‘Guard the true lady in her bower.’
  And I say, ‘Dear my Lord, Amen!’
  And the true lady kiss again. 
  Or else some wasteful malady
  Devours her shape and dims her eye;
  No charms are left, where all were rife,
  Except her voice, which is her life,
  Wherewith she, for her foolish fear,
  Says trembling, ‘Do you love me, Dear?’
  And I reply, ‘Sweetest, I vow
  ‘I never loved but half till now.’
  She turns her face to the wall at this,
  And says, ‘Go, Love, 'tis too much bliss.’
  And then a sudden pulse is sent
  About the sounding firmament
  In smitings as of silver bars;
  The bright disorder of the stars
  Is solved by music; far and near,
  Through infinite distinctions clear,
  Their twofold voices' deeper tone
  Utters the Name which all things own,
  And each ecstatic treble dwells
  On one whereof none other tells;
  And we, sublimed to song and fire,
  Take order in the wheeling quire,
  Till from the throbbing sphere I start,
  Waked by the heaving of my heart.

  Such dreams as these come night by night,
  Disturbing day with their delight.
  Portend they nothing? Who can tell!
  God yet may do some miracle.
  'Tis nigh two years, and she's not wed,
  Or you would know! He may be dead,
  Or mad, and loving some one else,
  And she, much moved that nothing quells
  My constancy, or, simply wroth
  With such a wretch, accept my troth
  To spite him; or her beauty's gone,
  (And that's my dream!) and this man Vaughan 
  Takes her release: or tongues malign,
  Confusing every ear but mine,
  Have smirch'd her: ah, 'twould move her, sure,
  To find I loved her all the more!
  Nay, now I think, haply amiss
  I read her words and looks, and his,
  That night! Did not his jealousy
  Show—Good my God, and can it be
  That I, a modest fool, all blest,
  Nothing of such a heaven guess'd?
  Oh, chance too frail, yet frantic sweet,
  To-morrow sees me at her feet!

  Yonder, at last, the glad sea roars
  Along the sacred English shores!
  There lies the lovely land I know,
  Where men and women lordliest grow;
  There peep the roofs where more than kings
  Postpone state cares to country things,
  And many a gay queen simply tends
  The babes on whom the world depends;
  There curls the wanton cottage smoke
  Of him that drives but bears no yoke;
  There laughs the realm where low and high
  Are lieges to society.
  And life has all too wide a scope,
  Too free a prospect for its hope,
  For any private good or ill,
  Except dishonour, quite to fill!
  —Mother, since this was penn'd, I've read
  That ‘Mr. Vaughan, on Tuesday, wed
  ‘The beautiful Miss Churchill.’ So
  That's over; and to-morrow I go
  To take up my new post on board
  The ‘Wolf,’ my peace at last restored; 
  My lonely faith, like heart-of-oak,
  Shock-season'd. Grief is now the cloak
  I clasp about me to prevent
  The deadly chill of a content
  With any near or distant good,
  Except the exact beatitude
  Which love has shown to my desire.
  Talk not of ‘other joys and higher,’
  I hate and disavow all bliss
  As none for me which is not this.
  Think not I blasphemously cope
  With God's decrees, and cast off hope.
  How, when, and where can mine succeed?
  I'll trust He knows who made my need.

  Baseness of men! Pursuit being o'er,
  Doubtless her Husband feels no more
  The heaven of heavens of such a Bride,
  But, lounging, lets her please his pride
  With fondness, guerdons her caress
  With little names, and turns a tress
  Round idle fingers. If 'tis so,
  Why then I'm happier of the two!
  Better, for lofty loss, high pain,
  Than low content with lofty gain.
  Poor, foolish Dove, to trust from me
  Her happiness and dignity!


X
From Frederick

  I thought the worst had brought me balm:
  'Twas but the tempest's central calm.
  Vague sinkings of the heart aver
  That dreadful wrong is come to her,
  And o'er this dream I brood and dote,
  And learn its agonies by rote.
  As if I loved it, early and late
  I make familiar with my fate,
  And feed, with fascinated will,
  On very dregs of finish'd ill.
  I think, she's near him now, alone,
  With wardship and protection none;
  Alone, perhaps, in the hindering stress
  Of airs that clasp him with her dress,
  They wander whispering by the wave;
  And haply now, in some sea-cave,
  Where the ribb'd sand is rarely trod,
  They laugh, they kiss. Oh, God! oh, God!
  There comes a smile acutely sweet
  Out of the picturing dark; I meet
  The ancient frankness of her gaze,
  That soft and heart-surprising blaze
  Of great goodwill and innocence,
  And perfect joy proceeding thence!
  Ah! made for earth's delight, yet such
  The mid-sea air's too gross to touch.
  At thought of which, the soul in me
  Is as the bird that bites a bee,
  And darts abroad on frantic wing,
  Tasting the honey and the sting; 
  And, moaning where all round me sleep
  Amidst the moaning of the deep,
  I start at midnight from my bed—
  And have no right to strike him dead.

  What world is this that I am in,
  Where chance turns sanctity to sin!
  'Tis crime henceforward to desire
  The only good; the sacred fire
  That sunn'd the universe is hell!
  I hear a Voice which argues well:
  ‘The Heaven hard has scorn'd your cry;
  ‘Fall down and worship me, and I
  ‘Will give you peace; go and profane
  ‘This pangful love, so pure, so vain,
  ‘And thereby win forgetfulness
  ‘And pardon of the spirit's excess,
  ‘Which soar'd too nigh that jealous Heaven
  ‘Ever, save thus, to be forgiven.
  ‘No Gospel has come down that cures
  ‘With better gain a loss like yours.
  ‘Be pious! Give the beggar pelf,
  ‘And love your neighbour as yourself!
  ‘You, who yet love, though all is o'er,
  ‘And she'll ne'er be your neighbour more,
  ‘With soul which can in pity smile
  ‘That aught with such a measure vile
  ‘As self should be at all named "love!"
  ‘Your sanctity the priests reprove;
  ‘Your case of grief they wholly miss;
  ‘The Man of Sorrows names not this.
  ‘The years, they say, graff love divine
  ‘On the lopp'd stock of love like thine;
  ‘The wild tree dies not, but converts.
  ‘So be it; but the lopping hurts,
  ‘The graff takes tardily! Men stanch
  ‘Meantime with earth the bleeding branch, 
  ‘There's nothing heals one woman's loss,
  ‘And lighten's life's eternal cross
  ‘With intermission of sound rest,
  ‘Like lying in another's breast.
  ‘The cure is, to your thinking, low!
  ‘Is not life all, henceforward, so?’

  Ill Voice, at least thou calm'st my mood.
  I'll sleep! But, as I thus conclude,
  The intrusions of her grace dispel
  The comfortable glooms of hell.

  A wonder! Ere these lines were dried,
  Vaughan and my Love, his three-days' Bride,
  Became my guests. I look'd, and, lo,
  In beauty soft as is the snow
  And powerful as the avalanche,
  She lit the deck. The Heav'n-sent chance!
  She smiled, surprised. They came to see
  The ship, not thinking to meet me.

  At infinite distance she's my day:
  What then to him? Howbeit they say
  'Tis not so sunny in the sun
  But men might live cool lives thereon!

  All's well; for I have seen arise
  That reflex sweetness of her eyes
  In his, and watch'd his breath defer
  Humbly its bated life to her,
  His wife. My Love, she's safe in his
  Devotion! What ask'd I but this?

  They bade adieu; I saw them go
  Across the sea; and now I know
  The ultimate hope I rested on,
  The hope beyond the grave, is gone,
  The hope that, in the heavens high,
  At last it should appear that I
  Loved most, and so, by claim divine,
  Should have her, in the heavens, for mine, 
  According to such nuptial sort
  As may subsist in the holy court,
  Where, if there are all kinds of joys
  To exhaust the multitude of choice
  In many mansions, then there are
  Loves personal and particular,
  Conspicuous in the glorious sky
  Of universal charity,
  As Phosphor in the sunrise. Now
  I've seen them, I believe their vow
  Immortal; and the dreadful thought,
  That he less honour'd than he ought
  Her sanctity, is laid to rest,
  And, blessing them, I too am blest.
  My goodwill, as a springing air,
  Unclouds a beauty in despair;
  I stand beneath the sky's pure cope
  Unburthen'd even by a hope;
  And peace unspeakable, a joy
  Which hope would deaden and destroy,
  Like sunshine fills the airy gulf
  Left by the vanishing of self.
  That I have known her; that she moves
  Somewhere all-graceful; that she loves,
  And is belov'd, and that she's so
  Most happy, and to heaven will go,
  Where I may meet with her, (yet this
  I count but accidental bliss,)
  And that the full, celestial weal
  Of all shall sensitively feel
  The partnership and work of each,
  And thus my love and labour reach
  Her region, there the more to bless
  Her last, consummate happiness,
  Is guerdon up to the degree
  Of that alone true loyalty 
  Which, sacrificing, is not nice
  About the terms of sacrifice,
  But offers all, with smiles that say,
  'Tis little, but it is for aye!


XI
From Mrs. Graham

  You wanted her, my Son, for wife,
  With the fierce need of life in life.
  That nobler passion of an hour
  Was rather prophecy than power;
  And nature, from such stress unbent,
  Recurs to deep discouragement.
  Trust not such peace yet; easy breath,
  In hot diseases, argues death;
  And tastelessness within the mouth
  Worse fever shows than heat or drouth.
  Wherefore take, Frederick, timely fear
  Against a different danger near:
  Wed not one woman, oh, my Child,
  Because another has not smiled!
  Oft, with a disappointed man,
  The first who cares to win him can;
  For, after love's heroic strain,
  Which tired the heart and brought no gain,
  He feels consoled, relieved, and eased
  To meet with her who can be pleased
  To proffer kindness, and compute
  His acquiescence for pursuit;
  Who troubles not his lonely mood;
  And asks for love mere gratitude. 
  Ah, desperate folly! Yet, we know,
  Who wed through love wed mostly so.

  At least, my Son, when wed you do,
  See that the woman equals you,
  Nor rush, from having loved too high,
  Into a worse humility.
  A poor estate's a foolish plea
  For marrying to a base degree.
  A woman grown cannot be train'd,
  Or, if she could, no love were gain'd;
  For, never was a man's heart caught
  By graces he himself had taught.
  And fancy not 'tis in the might
  Of man to do without delight;
  For, should you in her nothing find
  To exhilarate the higher mind,
  Your soul would deaden useless wings
  With wickedness of lawful things,
  And vampire pleasure swift destroy
  Even the memory of joy.
  So let no man, in desperate mood,
  Wed a dull girl because she's good.
  All virtues in his wife soon dim,
  Except the power of pleasing him,
  Which may small virtue be, or none!

  I know my just and tender Son,
  To whom the dangerous grace is given
  That scorns a good which is not heaven;
  My Child, who used to sit and sigh
  Under the bright, ideal sky,
  And pass, to spare the farmer's wheat,
  The poppy and the meadow-sweet!
  He would not let his wife's heart ache
  For what was mainly his mistake;
  But, having err'd so, all his force
  Would fix upon the hard, right course. 

  She's graceless, say, yet good and true,
  And therefore inly fair, and, through
  The veils which inward beauty fold,
  Faith can her loveliness behold.
  Ah, that's soon tired; faith falls away
  Without the ceremonial stay
  Of outward loveliness and awe.
  The weightier matters of the law
  She pays: mere mint and cumin not;
  And, in the road that she was taught,
  She treads, and takes for granted still
  Nature's immedicable ill;
  So never wears within her eyes
  A false report of paradise,
  Nor ever modulates her mirth
  With vain compassion of the earth,
  Which made a certain happier face
  Affecting, and a gayer grace
  With pathos delicately edged!
  Yet, though she be not privileged
  To unlock for you your heart's delight,
  (Her keys being gold, but not the right,)
  On lower levels she may do!
  Her joy is more in loving you
  Than being loved, and she commands
  All tenderness she understands.
  It is but when you proffer more
  The yoke weighs heavy and chafes sore.
  It's weary work enforcing love
  On one who has enough thereof,
  And honour on the lowlihead
  Of ignorance! Besides, you dread,
  In Leah's arms, to meet the eyes
  Of Rachel, somewhere in the skies,
  And both return, alike relieved,
  To life less loftily conceived. 
  Alas, alas!

  Then wait the mood
  In which a woman may be woo'd
  Whose thoughts and habits are too high
  For honour to be flattery,
  And who would surely not allow
  The suit that you could proffer now.
  Her equal yoke would sit with ease;
  It might, with wearing, even please,
  (Not with a better word to move
  The loyal wrath of present love);
  She would not mope when you were gay,
  For want of knowing aught to say;
  Nor vex you with unhandsome waste
  Of thoughts ill-timed and words ill-placed;
  Nor reckon small things duties small,
  And your fine sense fantastical;
  Nor would she bring you up a brood
  Of strangers bound to you by blood,
  Boys of a meaner moral race,
  Girls with their mother's evil grace,
  But not her chance to sometimes find
  Her critic past his judgment kind;
  Nor, unaccustom'd to respect,
  Which men, where 'tis not claim'd, neglect,
  Confirm you selfish and morose,
  And slowly, by contagion, gross;
  But, glad and able to receive
  The honour you would long to give,
  Would hasten on to justify
  Expectancy, however high,
  Whilst you would happily incur
  Compulsion to keep up with her.


XII
From Frederick

  Your letter, Mother, bears the date
  Of six months back, and comes too late.
  My Love, past all conceiving lost,
  A change seem'd good, at any cost,
  From lonely, stupid, silent grief,
  Vain, objectless, beyond relief,
  And, like a sea-fog, settled dense
  On fancy, feeling, thought, and sense.
  I grew so idle, so despised
  Myself, my powers, by Her unprized,
  Honouring my post, but nothing more,
  And lying, when I lived on shore,
  So late of mornings: weak tears stream'd
  For such slight cause,—if only gleam'd,
  Remotely, beautifully bright,
  On clouded eves at sea, the light
  Of English headlands in the sun,—
  That soon I deem'd 'twere better done
  To lay this poor, complaining wraith
  Of unreciprocated faith:
  And so, with heart still bleeding quick,
  But strengthen'd by the comfort sick
  Of knowing that She could not care,
  I turn'd away from my despair,
  And told our chaplain's daughter, Jane,—
  A dear, good girl, who saw my pain,
  And look'd as if she pitied me,—
  How glad and thankful I should be
  If some kind woman, not above
  Myself in rank, would give her love 
  To one that knew not how to woo.
  Whereat she, without more ado,
  Blush'd, spoke of love return'd, and closed
  With what she thought I had proposed.

  And, trust me, Mother, I and Jane,
  We suit each other well. My gain
  Is very great in this good Wife,
  To whom I'm bound, for natural life,
  By hearty faith, yet crossing not
  My faith towards—I know not what!
  As to the ether is the air,
  Is her good to Honoria's fair;
  One place is full of both, yet each
  Lies quite beyond the other's reach
  And recognition.

  If you say,
  Am I contented? Yea and nay!
  For what's base but content to grow
  With less good than the best we know?
  But think me not from life withdrawn,
  By passion for a hope that's gone,
  So far as to forget how much
  A woman is, as merely such,
  To man's affection. What is best,
  In each, belongs to all the rest;
  And though, in marriage, quite to kiss
  And half to love the custom is,
  'Tis such dishonour, ruin bare,
  The soul's interior despair,
  And life between two troubles toss'd,
  To me, who think not with the most;
  Whatever 'twould have been, before
  My Cousin's time, 'tis now so sore
  A treason to the abiding throne
  Of that sweet love which I have known,
  I cannot live so, and I bend 
  My mind perforce to comprehend
  That He who gives command to love
  Does not require a thing above
  The strength He gives. The highest degree
  Of the hardest grace, humility;
  The step t'ward heaven the latest trod,
  And that which makes us most like God,
  And us much more than God behoves,
  Is, to be humble in our loves.
  Henceforth for ever therefore I
  Renounce all partiality
  Of passion. Subject to control
  Of that perspective of the soul
  Which God Himself pronounces good,
  Confirming claims of neighbourhood,
  And giving man, for earthly life,
  The closest neighbour in a wife,
  I'll serve all. Jane be much more dear
  Than all as she is much more near!
  I'll love her! Yea, and love's joy comes
  Ever from self-love's martyrdoms!

  Yet, not to lie for God, 'tis true
  That 'twas another joy I knew
  When freighted was my heart with fire
  Of fond, irrational desire
  For fascinating, female charms,
  And hopeless heaven in Her mild arms.
  Nor wrong I any, if I profess
  That care for heaven with me were less
  But that I'm utterly imbued
  With faith of all Earth's hope renew'd
  In realms where no short-coming pains
  Expectance, and dear love disdains
  Time's treason, and the gathering dross,
  And lasts for ever in the gloss
  Of newness. 

  All the bright past seems,
  Now, but a splendour in my dreams,
  Which shows, albeit the dreamer wakes,
  The standard of right life. Life aches
  To be therewith conform'd; but, oh,
  The world's so stolid, dark, and low!
  That and the mortal element
  Forbid the beautiful intent,
  And, like the unborn butterfly,
  It feels the wings, and wants the sky.

  But perilous is the lofty mood
  Which cannot yoke with lowly good.
  Right life, for me, is life that wends
  By lowly ways to lofty ends.
  I well perceive, at length, that haste
  T'ward heaven itself is only waste;
  And thus I dread the impatient spur
  Of aught that speaks too plain of Her.
  There's little here that story tells;
  But music talks of nothing else.
  Therefore, when music breathes, I say,
  (And urge my task,) Away, away!
  Thou art the voice of one I knew,
  But what thou say'st is not yet true;
  Thou art the voice of her I loved,
  And I would not be vainly moved.

  So that which did from death set free
  All things, now dons death's mockery,
  And takes its place with things that are
  But little noted. Do not mar
  For me your peace! My health is high.
  The proud possession of mine eye
  Departed, I am much like one
  Who had by haughty custom grown
  To think gilt rooms, and spacious grounds,
  Horses, and carriages, and hounds, 
  Fine linen, and an eider bed
  As much his need as daily bread,
  And honour of men as much or more.
  Till, strange misfortune smiting sore,
  His pride all goes to pay his debts,
  A lodging anywhere he gets,
  And takes his family thereto
  Weeping, and other relics few,
  Allow'd, by them that seize his pelf,
  As precious only to himself.
  Yet the sun shines; the country green
  Has many riches, poorly seen
  From blazon'd coaches; grace at meat
  Goes well with thrift in what they eat;
  And there's amends for much bereft
  In better thanks for much that's left!

  Jane is not fair, yet pleases well
  The eye in which no others dwell;
  And features somewhat plainly set,
  And homely manners leave her yet
  The crowning boon and most express
  Of Heaven's inventive tenderness,
  A woman. But I do her wrong,
  Letting the world's eyes guide my tongue!
  She has a handsomeness that pays
  No homage to the hourly gaze,
  And dwells not on the arch'd brow's height
  And lids which softly lodge the light,
  Nor in the pure field of the cheek
  Flow'rs, though the soul be still to seek;
  But shows as fits that solemn place
  Whereof the window is the face:
  Blankness and leaden outlines mark
  What time the Church within is dark;
  Yet view it on a Festal night,
  Or some occasion else for light, 
  And each ungainly line is seen
  A special character to mean
  Of Saint or Prophet, and the whole
  Blank window is a living scroll.

  For hours, the clock upon the shelf,
  Has all the talking to itself;
  But to and fro her needle runs
  Twice, while the clock is ticking once;
  And, when a wife is well in reach,
  Not silence separates, but speech;
  And I, contented, read, or smoke,
  And idly think, or idly stroke
  The winking cat, or watch the fire,
  In social peace that does not tire;
  Until, at easeful end of day,
  She moves, and puts her work away,
  And, saying ‘How cold 'tis,’ or ‘How warm,’
  Or something else as little harm,
  Comes, used to finding, kindly press'd,
  A woman's welcome to my breast,
  With all the great advantage clear
  Of none else having been so near.

  But sometimes, (how shall I deny!)
  There falls, with her thus fondly by,
  Dejection, and a chilling shade.
  Remember'd pleasures, as they fade,
  Salute me, and colossal grow,
  Like foot-prints in the thawing snow.
  I feel oppress'd beyond my force
  With foolish envy and remorse.
  I love this woman, but I might
  Have loved some else with more delight;
  And strange it seems of God that He
  Should make a vain capacity.

  Such times of ignorant relapse,
  'Tis well she does not talk, perhaps. 
  The dream, the discontent, the doubt,
  To some injustice flaming out,
  Were't else, might leave us both to moan
  A kind tradition overthrown,
  And dawning promise once more dead
  In the pernicious lowlihead
  Of not aspiring to be fair.
  And what am I, that I should dare
  Dispute with God, who moulds one clay
  To honour and shame, and wills to pay
  With equal wages them that delve
  About His vines one hour or twelve!


XIII
From Lady Clitheroe To Mary Churchill

  I've dreadful news, my Sister dear!
  Frederick has married, as we hear,
  Oh, such a girl! This fact we get
  From Mr. Barton, whom we met
  At Abury once. He used to know,
  At Race and Hunt, Lord Clitheroe,
  And writes that he ‘has seen Fred Graham,
  ‘Commander of the "Wolf,"—the same
  ‘The Mess call'd Joseph,—with his Wife
  ‘Under his arm.’ He ‘lays his life,
  ‘The fellow married her for love,
  ‘For there was nothing else to move.
  ‘H. is her Shibboleth. 'Tis said
  ‘Her Mother was a Kitchen-Maid.’ 

  Poor Fred! What will Honoria say?
  She thought so highly of him. Pray
  Tell it her gently. I've no right,
  I know you hold, to trust my sight;
  But Frederick's state could not be hid!
  And Felix, coming when he did,
  Was lucky; for Honoria, too,
  Was half in love. How warm she grew
  On ‘worldliness,’ when once I said
  I fancied that, in ladies, Fred
  Had tastes much better than his means!
  His hand was worthy of a Queen's,
  Said she, and actually shed tears
  The night he left us for two years,
  And sobb'd, when ask'd the cause to tell,
  That ‘Frederick look'd so miserable.’
  He did look very dull, no doubt,
  But such things girls don't cry about.

  What weathercocks men always prove!
  You're quite right not to fall in love.
  I never did, and, truth to tell,
  I don't think it respectable.
  The man can't understand it, too.
  He likes to be in love with you,
  But scarce knows how, if you love him,
  Poor fellow. When 'tis woman's whim
  To serve her husband night and day,
  The kind soul lets her have her way!
  So, if you wed, as soon you should,
  Be selfish for your husband's good.
  Happy the men who relegate
  Their pleasures, vanities, and state
  To us. Their nature seems to be
  To enjoy themselves by deputy,
  For, seeking their own benefit,
  Dear, what a mess they make of it! 
  A man will work his bones away,
  If but his wife will only play;
  He does not mind how much he's teased,
  So that his plague looks always pleased;
  And never thanks her, while he lives,
  For anything, but what he gives!
  'Tis hard to manage men, we hear!
  Believe me, nothing's easier, Dear.
  The most important step by far
  Is finding what their colours are.
  The next is, not to let them know
  The reason why they love us so.
  The indolent droop of a blue shawl,
  Or gray silk's fluctuating fall,
  Covers the multitude of sins
  In me. Your husband, Love, might wince
  At azure, and be wild at slate,
  And yet do well with chocolate.
  Of course you'd let him fancy he
  Adored you for your piety.


XIV
From Jane To Her Mother

  Dear Mother, as you write, I see
  How glad and thankful I should be
  For such a husband. Yet to tell
  The truth, I am so miserable!
  How could he—I remember, though,
  He never said he loved me! No,
  He is so right that all seems wrong
  I've done and thought my whole life long! 
  I'm grown so dull and dead with fear
  That Yes and No, when he is near,
  Is all I have to say. He's quite
  Unlike what most would call polite,
  And yet, when first I saw him come
  To tea in Aunt's fine drawing-room,
  He made me feel so common! Oh,
  How dreadful if he thinks me so!
  It's no use trying to behave
  To him. His eye, so kind and grave,
  Sees through and through me! Could not you,
  Without his knowing that I knew,
  Ask him to scold me now and then?
  Mother, it's such a weary strain
  The way he has of treating me
  As if 'twas something fine to be
  A woman; and appearing not
  To notice any faults I've got!
  I know he knows I'm plain, and small,
  Stupid, and ignorant, and all
  Awkward and mean; and, by degrees,
  I see a beauty which he sees,
  When often he looks strange awhile,
  Then recollects me with a smile.

  I wish he had that fancied Wife,
  With me for Maid, now! all my life
  To dress her out for him, and make
  Her looks the lovelier for his sake;
  To have her rate me till I cried;
  Then see her seated by his side,
  And driven off proudly to the Ball;
  Then to stay up for her, whilst all
  The servants were asleep; and hear
  At dawn the carriage rolling near,
  And let them in; and hear her laugh,
  And boast, he said that none was half 
  So beautiful, and that the Queen,
  Who danced with him the first, had seen
  And noticed her, and ask'd who was
  That lady in the golden gauze?
  And then to go to bed, and lie
  In a sort of heavenly jealousy,
  Until 'twas broad day, and I guess'd
  She slept, nor knew how she was bless'd.

  Pray burn this letter. I would not
  Complain, but for the fear I've got
  Of going wild, as we hear tell
  Of people shut up in a cell,
  With no one there to talk to. He
  Must never know he is loved by me
  The most; he'd think himself to blame;
  And I should almost die for shame.

  If being good would serve instead
  Of being graceful, ah, then, Fred—
  But I, myself, I never could
  See what's in women's being good;
  For all their goodness is to do
  Just what their nature tells them to.
  Now, when a man would do what's right,
  He has to try with all his might.

  Though true and kind in deed and word,
  Fred's not a vessel of the Lord.
  But I have hopes of him; for, oh,
  How can we ever surely know
  But that the very darkest place
  May be the scene of saving grace!


XV
From Frederick

  ‘How did I feel?’ The little wight
  Fill'd me, unfatherly, with fright!
  So grim it gazed, and, out of the sky,
  There came, minute, remote, the cry,
  Piercing, of original pain.
  I put the wonder back to Jane,
  And her delight seem'd dash'd, that I,
  Of strangers still by nature shy,
  Was not familiar quite so soon
  With her small friend of many a moon.
  But, when the new-made Mother smiled,
  She seem'd herself a little child,
  Dwelling at large beyond the law
  By which, till then, I judged and saw;
  And that fond glow which she felt stir
  For it, suffused my heart for her;
  To whom, from the weak babe, and thence
  To me, an influent innocence,
  Happy, reparative of life,
  Came, and she was indeed my wife,
  As there, lovely with love she lay,
  Brightly contented all the day
  To hug her sleepy little boy,
  In the reciprocated joy
  Of touch, the childish sense of love,
  Ever inquisitive to prove
  Its strange possession, and to know
  If the eye's report be really so.


XVI
From Jane To Mrs. Graham

  Dear Mother,—such if you'll allow,
  In love, not law, I'll call you now,—
  I hope you're well. I write to say
  Frederick has got, besides his pay,
  A good appointment in the Docks;
  Also to thank you for the frocks
  And shoes for Baby. I, (D.V.,)
  Shall soon be strong. Fred goes to sea
  No more. I am so glad; because,
  Though kinder husband never was,
  He seems still kinder to become
  The more he stays with me at home.
  When we are parted, I see plain
  He's dull till he gets used again
  To marriage. Do not tell him, though;
  I would not have him know I know,
  For all the world.

  I try to mind
  All your advice; but sometimes find
  I do not well see how. I thought
  To take it about dress; so bought
  A gay new bonnet, gown, and shawl;
  But Frederick was not pleased at all;
  For, though he smiled, and said, ‘How smart!’
  I feel, you know, what's in his heart.
  But I shall learn! I fancied long
  That care in dress was very wrong,
  Till Frederick, in his startling way,
  When I began to blame, one day,
  The Admiral's Wife, because we hear
  She spends two hours, or something near, 
  In dressing, took her part, and said
  How all things deck themselves that wed;
  How birds and plants grow fine to please
  Each other in their marriages;
  And how (which certainly is true—
  It never struck me—did it you?)
  Dress was, at first, Heaven's ordinance,
  And has much Scripture countenance.
  For Eliezer, we are told,
  Adorn'd with jewels and with gold
  Rebecca. In the Psalms, again,
  How the King's Daughter dress'd! And, then,
  The Good Wife in the Proverbs, she
  Made herself clothes of tapestry,
  Purple and silk: and there's much more
  I had not thought about before!
  But Fred's so clever! Do you know,
  Since Baby came, he loves me so!
  I'm really useful, now, to Fred;
  And none could do so well instead.
  It's nice to fancy, if I died,
  He'd miss me from the Darling's side!
  Also, there's something now, you see,
  On which we talk, and quite agree;
  On which, without pride too, I can
  Hope I'm as wise as any man.
  I should be happy now, if quite
  Sure that in one thing Fred was right.
  But, though I trust his prayers are said,
  Because he goes so late to bed,
  I doubt his Calling. Glad to find
  A text adapted to his mind,—
  That where St. Paul, in Man and Wife,
  Allows a little worldly life,—
  He smiled, and said that he knew all
  Such things as that without St. Paul! 
  And once he said, when I with pain
  Had got him just to read Romaine,
  ‘Men's creeds should not their hopes condemn.
  ‘Who wait for heaven to come to them
  ‘Are little like to go to heaven,
  ‘If logic's not the devil's leaven!’
  I cried at such a wicked joke,
  And he, surprised, went out to smoke.

  But to judge him is not for me,
  Who myself sin so dreadfully
  As half to doubt if I should care
  To go to heaven, and he not there.
  He must be right; and I dare say
  I shall soon understand his way.
  To other things, once strange, I've grown
  Accustom'd, nay, to like. I own
  'Twas long before I got well used
  To sit, while Frederick read or mused
  For hours, and scarcely spoke. When he
  For all that, held the door to me,
  Pick'd up my handkerchief, and rose
  To set my chair, with other shows
  Of honour, such as men, 'tis true,
  To sweethearts and fine ladies do,
  It almost seem'd an unkind jest;
  But now I like these ways the best.
  They somehow make me gentle and good;
  And I don't mind his quiet mood.
  If Frederick does seem dull awhile,
  There's Baby. You should see him smile!
  I'm pretty and nice to him, sweet Pet,
  And he will learn no better yet:
  Indeed, now little Johnny makes
  A busier time of it, and takes
  Our thoughts off one another more,
  I'm happy as need be, I'm sure!


XVII
From Felix To Honoria

  Let me, Beloved, while gratitude
  Is garrulous with coming good,
  Or ere the tongue of happiness
  Be silenced by your soft caress,
  Relate how, musing here of you,
  The clouds, the intermediate blue,
  The air that rings with larks, the grave
  And distant rumour of the wave,
  The solitary sailing skiff,
  The gusty corn-field on the cliff,
  The corn-flower by the crumbling ledge,
  Or, far-down at the shingle's edge,
  The sighing sea's recurrent crest
  Breaking, resign'd to its unrest,
  All whisper, to my home-sick thought,
  Of charms in you till now uncaught,
  Or only caught as dreams, to die
  Ere they were own'd by memory.

  High and ingenious Decree
  Of joy-devising Deity!
  You whose ambition only is
  The assurance that you make my bliss,
  (Hence my first debt of love to show,
  That you, past showing, indeed do so!)
  Trust me, the world, the firmament,
  With diverse-natured worlds besprent,
  Were rear'd in no mere undivine
  Boast of omnipotent design,
  The lion differing from the snake
  But for the trick of difference sake, 
  And comets darting to and fro
  Because in circles planets go;
  But rather that sole love might be
  Refresh'd throughout eternity
  In one sweet faith, for ever strange,
  Mirror'd by circumstantial change.
  For, more and more, do I perceive
  That everything is relative
  To you, and that there's not a star,
  Nor nothing in't, so strange or far,
  But, if 'twere scanned, 'twould chiefly mean
  Somewhat, till then, in you unseen,
  Something to make the bondage strait
  Of you and me more intimate,
  Some unguess'd opportunity
  Of nuptials in a new degree.

  But, oh, with what a novel force
  Your best-conn'd beauties, by remorse
  Of absence, touch; and, in my heart,
  How bleeds afresh the youthful smart
  Of passion fond, despairing still
  To utter infinite good-will
  By worthy service! Yet I know
  That love is all that love can owe,
  And this to offer is no less
  Of worth, in kind speech or caress,
  Than if my life-blood I should give.
  For good is God's prerogative,
  And Love's deed is but to prepare
  The flatter'd, dear Belov'd to dare
  Acceptance of His gifts. When first
  On me your happy beauty burst,
  Honoria, verily it seem'd
  That naught beyond you could be dream'd
  Of beauty and of heaven's delight.
  Zeal of an unknown infinite 
  Yet bade me ever wish you more
  Beatified than e'er before.
  Angelical were your replies
  To my prophetic flatteries;
  And sweet was the compulsion strong
  That drew me in the course along
  Of heaven's increasing bright allure,
  With provocations fresh of your
  Victorious capacity.
  Whither may love, so fledged, not fly?

  Did not mere Earth hold fast the string
  Of this celestial soaring thing,
  So measure and make sensitive,
  And still, to the nerves, nice notice give
  Of each minutest increment
  Of such interminable ascent,
  The heart would lose all count, and beat
  Unconscious of a height so sweet,
  And the spirit-pursuing senses strain
  Their steps on the starry track in vain!
  But, reading now the note just come,
  With news of you, the babes, and home,
  I think, and say, ‘To-morrow eve
  ‘With kisses me will she receive;’
  And, thinking, for extreme delight
  Of love's extremes, I laugh outright.


XVIII
From Frederick

  Eight wedding-days gone by, and none
  Yet kept, to keep them all in one,
  Jane and myself, with John and Grace
  On donkeys, visited the place
  I first drew breath in, Knatchley Wood.
  Bearing the basket, stuff'd with food,
  Milk, loaves, hard eggs, and marmalade,
  I halted where the wandering glade
  Divides the thicket. There I knew,
  It seem'd, the very drops of dew
  Below the unalter'd eglantine.
  Nothing had changed since I was nine!

  In the green desert, down to eat
  We sat, our rustic grace at meat
  Good appetite, through that long climb
  Hungry two hours before the time.
  And there Jane took her stitching out,
  And John for birds'-nests pry'd about,
  And Grace and Baby, in between
  The warm blades of the breathing green,
  Dodged grasshoppers; and I no less,
  In conscientious idleness,
  Enjoy'd myself, under the noon
  Stretch'd, and the sounds and sights of June
  Receiving, with a drowsy charm,
  Through muffled ear and folded arm.

  And then, as if I sweetly dream'd,
  I half-remember'd how it seem'd
  When I, too, was a little child
  About the wild wood roving wild. 
  Pure breezes from the far-off height
  Melted the blindness from my sight,
  Until, with rapture, grief, and awe,
  I saw again as then I saw.
  As then I saw, I saw again
  The harvest-waggon in the lane,
  With high-hung tokens of its pride
  Left in the elms on either side;
  The daisies coming out at dawn
  In constellations on the lawn;
  The glory of the daffodil;
  The three black windmills on the hill,
  Whose magic arms, flung wildly by,
  Sent magic shadows o'er the rye.
  Within the leafy coppice, lo,
  More wealth than miser's dreams could show,
  The blackbird's warm and woolly brood,
  Five golden beaks agape for food;
  The Gipsies, all the summer seen
  Native as poppies to the Green;
  The winter, with its frosts and thaws
  And opulence of hips and haws;
  The lovely marvel of the snow;
  The Tamar, with its altering show
  Of gay ships sailing up and down,
  Among the fields and by the Town;
  And, dearer far than anything,
  Came back the songs you used to sing.
  (Ah, might you sing such songs again,
  And I, your Child, but hear as then,
  With conscious profit of the gulf
  Flown over from my present self!)
  And, as to men's retreating eyes,
  Beyond high mountains higher rise,
  Still farther back there shone to me
  The dazzling dusk of infancy. 
  Thither I look'd, as, sick of night,
  The Alpine shepherd looks to the height,
  And does not see the day, 'tis true,
  But sees the rosy tops that do.

  Meantime Jane stitch'd, and fann'd the flies
  From my repose, with hush'd replies
  To Grace, and smiles when Baby fell.
  Her countenance love visible
  Appear'd, love audible her voice.
  Why in the past alone rejoice,
  Whilst here was wealth before me cast
  Which, I could feel, if 'twere but past
  Were then most precious? Question vain,
  When ask'd again and yet again,
  Year after year; yet now, for no
  Cause, but that heaven's bright winds will blow
  Not at our pray'r but as they list,
  It brought that distant, golden mist
  To grace the hour, firing the deep
  Of spirit and the drowsy keep
  Of joy, till, spreading uncontain'd,
  The holy power of seeing gain'd
  The outward eye, this owning even
  That where there's love and truth there's heaven.

  Debtor to few, forgotten hours
  Am I, that truths for me are powers.
  Ah, happy hours, 'tis something yet
  Not to forget that I forget!

  And now a cloud, bright, huge and calm,
  Rose, doubtful if for bale or balm;
  O'ertoppling towers and bulwarks bright
  Appear'd, at beck of viewless might,
  Along a rifted mountain range.
  Untraceable and swift in change,
  Those glittering peaks, disrupted, spread
  To solemn bulks, seen overhead; 
  The sunshine quench'd, from one dark form
  Fumed the appalling light of storm.
  Straight to the zenith, black with bale,
  The Gipsies' smoke rose deadly pale;
  And one wide night of hopeless hue
  Hid from the heart the recent blue.
  And soon, with thunder crackling loud,
  A flash reveal'd the formless cloud:
  Lone sailing rack, far wavering rim,
  And billowy tracks of stormland dim.

  We stood, safe group'd beneath a shed.
  Grace hid behind Jane's gown for dread,
  Who told her, fondling with her hair,
  ‘The naughty noise! but God took care
  ‘Of all good girls.’ John seem'd to me
  Too much for Jane's theology,
  Who bade him watch the tempest. Now
  A blast made all the woodland bow;
  Against the whirl of leaves and dust
  Kine dropp'd their heads; the tortured gust
  Jagg'd and convuls'd the ascending smoke
  To mockery of the lightning's stroke.
  The blood prick'd, and a blinding flash
  And close coinstantaneous crash
  Humbled the soul, and the rain all round
  Resilient dimm'd the whistling ground,
  Nor flagg'd in force from first to last,
  Till, sudden as it came, 'twas past,
  Leaving a trouble in the copse
  Of brawling birds and tinkling drops.

  Change beyond hope! Far thunder faint
  Mutter'd its vast and vain complaint,
  And gaps and fractures, fringed with light,
  Show'd the sweet skies, with squadrons bright
  Of cloudlets, glittering calm and fair
  Through gulfs of calm and glittering air. 

  With this adventure, we return'd.
  The roads the feet no longer burn'd.
  A wholesome smell of rainy earth
  Refresh'd our spirits, tired of mirth.
  The donkey-boy drew friendly near
  My Wife, and, touch'd by the kind cheer
  Her countenance show'd, or sooth'd perchance
  By the soft evening's sad advance,
  As we were, stroked the flanks and head
  Of the ass, and, somewhat thick-voiced, said,
  ‘To 'ave to wop the donkeys so
  ‘'Ardens the 'art, but they won't go
  ‘Without!’ My Wife, by this impress'd,
  As men judge poets by their best,
  When now we reach'd the welcome door,
  Gave him his hire, and sixpence more.


XIX
From Jane

  Dear Mrs. Graham, the fever's past,
  And Fred is well. I, in my last,
  Forgot to say that, while 'twas on,
  A lady, call'd Honoria Vaughan,
  One of his Salisbury Cousins, came.
  Had I, she ask'd me, heard her name?
  'Twas that Honoria, no doubt,
  Whom he would sometimes talk about
  And speak to, when his nights were bad,
  And so I told her that I had.

  She look'd so beautiful and kind!
  And just the sort of wife my mind 
  Pictured for Fred, with many tears,
  In those sad early married years.

  Visiting, yesterday, she said,
  The Admiral's Wife, she learn'd that Fred
  Was very ill; she begg'd to be,
  If possible, of use to me.
  What could she do? Last year, his Aunt
  Died, leaving her, who had no want,
  Her fortune. Half was his, she thought;
  But he, she knew, would not be brought
  To take his rights at second hand.
  Yet something might, she hoped, be plann'd.
  What did I think of putting John
  To school and college? Mr. Vaughan,
  When John was old enough, could give
  Preferment to her relative;
  And she should be so pleased.—I said
  I felt quite sure that dearest Fred
  Would be most thankful. Would we come,
  And make ourselves, she ask'd, at home,
  Next month, at High-Hurst? Change of air
  Both he and I should need, and there
  At leisure we could talk, and then
  Fix plans, as John was nearly ten.

  It seemed so rude to think and doubt,
  So I said, Yes. In going out,
  She said, ‘How strange of Frederick, Dear,’
  (I wish he had been there to hear,)
  ‘To send no cards, or tell me what
  ‘A nice new Cousin I had got!’
  Was not that kind?

  When Fred grew strong,
  I had, I found, done very wrong.
  Anger was in his voice and eye.
  With people born and bred so high
  As Fred and Mrs. Vaughan and you, 
  It's hard to guess what's right to do;
  And he won't teach me!

  Dear Fred wrote,
  Directly, such a lovely note,
  Which, though it undid all I had done,
  Was, both to me and Mrs. Vaughan,
  So kind! His words, I can't say why,
  Like soldiers' music, made me cry.

© Coventry Kersey Dighton Patmore