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Denzil place

a story in verse. By Violet Fane [i.e. M. M. Lamb]

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PART II.
  
 VII. 
  
 VIII. 
  
 IX. 
  
 X. 
  
 XI. 
  
 XII. 
  
  


127

II. PART II.


129

“The angels, not half so happy in heaven
Went envying her and me;
Yes! that was the reason (as all men know
In this Kingdom by the sea,)
That the wind came out of the cloud by night
Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee.
But our love it was stronger by far than the love
Of those who were older than we—
Of many far wiser than we;
And neither the angels in heaven above
Nor the demons down under the sea
Can ever dissever my soul from the soul
Of the beautiful Annabel Lee.”
Edgar Allan Poe.


131

Oh, lost and lov'd, and gone before!
I look and long with tearful eyes
For what will come to me no more,
The summer warmth of southern skies,
The sunny waves that rise and swell
And seem to me at times as near
As those that echo in a shell
Held to a child's attentive ear,
Oh, lost and lov'd! The magic thread
That binds my heart to scenes like these
Shines not alone from radiance shed
Thro' golden fruited orange-trees,
The murmur of that tideless sea,
The odour of those thousand flow'rs
Alone, had never lent to me
This day-dream of delicious hours!
Ah, thou wert there . . . ! Dear sunny clime
In which we lived our happy day,
No changes wrought by tide or time
Can steal thy borrow'd charms away!
For, turning back to Love and thee
These dismal hours reflect again
The radiance of that summer-sea
And dull the anguish of my pain.
Dear Land of Love! I sometimes dream
That I, unlov'd, am wand'ring there,
And wonder if its groves would seem
As fragrant, or its skies as fair—
I wonder too, if this dim light
This mock'ry of a summer sun,
Might not appear to me more bright
If shared by that belovèd one?

132

I know not, but at eventide,
After this faded sun has set,
When thro' the window, open wide,
I breathe the scented mignionette
And all the flow'rs thou loved'st so well,
The clematis and violet,
And drooping yellow asphodel,
Then mem'ry whispers to my heart
Of all the joys denied to me,
And wheresoever love, thou art
I fain would go and dwell with thee!

133

VII.

“Italia, Italia, o tu cui feo la sorte
Dono infelice di bellezza; ond' hai
Funesta dote d'infiniti guai
Che in fronte scritti per grand doglia porte.”
Vincenzo Filicaia.


“. . . . . . . . . . A land
Which was the mightiest in its old command
And is the loveliest, and must ever be
The master mould of Nature's heavenly brand
Wherein were cast the heroic and the free,
The beautiful, the brave, the lords of earth and sea.”
Byron.

Oh, Italy! how dare I write of thee
When other bolder lips than mine have fail'd
To sing thy praise as I would have it sung?—
Home of the myrtle and the violet—
Sky of serenest, clearest, bluest blue,
Earth of intensest, warmest fruitfulness—

134

Where life is liv'd, and ev'ry quicken'd sense
Impatient, drinks in loveliness, and feasts
On wonder after wonder!
Having bask'd
Beneath thy glorious, seldom-shrouded sun,
And lov'd beneath thy scented orange boughs,
Dear land of Art, of Beauty, and of Love,
Now that my happy lips can proudly add
The name of Freedom to thy list of charms,
Fain would I, when my journey here is done
Mix with thy sweet emancipated Earth!
Constance had sought this land which, like herself,
Was bless'd (or cursed) by Heaven with the dow'r—
‘The fatal dow'r of Beauty,’ but alas
For her, altho' resembling Italy
In being born to this fair heritage—
E'en more unfortunate than that sweet land
She groan'd in faster fetters;—all in vain
For her Italia's liberators rose,
Mazzini, Garibaldi, and Cavour,
Breaking a bondage less inveterate
Than was her own; weighing upon the heart
The burden of a fatal servitude

135

Defies emancipation;—thus she sigh'd
A lovely slave in chains—(those chains that seem
To some like brittle bands of summer flow'rs,
As Love, descending airily on them
With the soft 'lighting of a butterfly,
Leaves no sad trace behind to mark the place
Where his white wings have press'd, whilst on another
More keenly sensitive, he burns a scar
Searing and withering unto the core
The hapless heart that never more is whole.)
How could she free herself from all the host
Of newly waken'd torments? How subdue
The multitude of restless enemies
Besieging her, and harassing her soul?
Love and Despair, and vascillating Hope,
And Self-reproach, and Jealousy, and Doubt?
How put to flight these fierce invading foes—
These tyrants—these Tedeschi of the heart?
The town near which sad Constance made a home
Was by the shores of that delightful sea
Tideless, and often bluer than the sky
Kissing its utmost edge; towards the hills

136

Which bounded it to westward, gardens grew
And olive-grounds, where nestling in the shade
Of orange-groves, and dim with treliss'd ways
O'errun with creepers, painted villas rose
With cool low rooms, paved with their octagons
Of shining crimson tiles, whilst on their walls
The cunning artist had depicted scenes
Repeating those the gay Venetian blinds
Shut out from view—long line of sunny sea
And orange-gardens, sombre cypress trees
And sparkling fountains; all the ceilings too
Seem'd mimic vaults of heav'n, altho' the art
Of mortal painter could not imitate
The cloudless blue of the Italian sky.
In one of these my heroine dwelt alone
An exile and a penitent: her home,
The smallest of two villas which were call'd
By the same name, stood in the garden grounds
Of its more spacious neighbour. Those who know
The wondrous beauties of that flowr'y land
Will see in fancy such a fairy place
As was this southern garden! Tow'rds the left
(Looking to seaward) rose the boundary

137

Which shut this Eden from the outer world—
A sunny wall of stucco, painted pink,
Where, sporting in and out the frequent chinks
Left by the clumsy scaffolding, she watch'd
The playful pointed lizards in the sun.
She often strove to catch them, but in vain;
Like many other far more precious things
They glided thro' her fingers, or, at times
Half blinded with the glory of the sun,
She only grasp'd a shadow, scaring thus
The fleet reality, which slid away
Leaving her empty-handed.
Near this wall
Was built a shady summer-house or bow'r
In which there was a window, garlanded
With many-colour'd roses, clematis,
And tendrils of the scarlet passion-flow'r.
Oft sitting in this leafy balcony
That over-look'd the narrow stone-paved way
Which led down from the mountains to the town
She mused for hours, fann'd by delicious air,
And list'ning to the unaccustom'd sounds
Wafted around her. Tinkling southern chimes,
The ratt'ling hoofs of heavy-laden mules,

138

The cracking whips of sun-burnt muleteers
Who goaded on with curses or with songs
The patient creatures, smother'd with their bells
And scarlet tassels. Seated carelessly
Amongst their panniers, knitting as they rode,
The black-eyed peasant-women laugh'd and joked
And shouted to the men. Or, sadder sounds
Would reach her, when the brown Franciscan friars
Pass'd, bearing to their convent in the hills
The silent dead. The painted effigies
Upon the waving banners which they bore
Reach'd almost to the window where she sat,—
The twinkling candles, and the crucifix
Uplifted high in air, to which there hung
The ghastly figure of a naked Christ
Surrounded by the horrid instruments
Of human torture, sponge, and murd'rous spear
And wreath of biting thorns—all these recall'd
With painful vividness the agony
Of God on earth; anon, from time to time
Long after the procession pass'd her by,
Borne back upon the gentle southern breeze
She heard again that dismal monotone.

139

The convent had been hidden in the shade
Of sombre olive-trees, but that aloft
Its pointed belfry, roof'd with colour'd tiles
Betray'd the refuge of those holy men
Who here had fled the turmoil of the world
Vowing to bear perpetual poverty
And live according to the godly rules
Dictated by St. Francis. Or, again,
When western breezes, with their balmy breath,
Changed the dim branches to a shining sea
Of glist'ning brightness, turning heavenwards
The silver under lining of their leaves,
Then Constance could behold betwixt the boughs
The high enclosing walls, and thro' the gates
Could catch a glimpse of tombstones gay with flow'rs
And color'd crosses, many deck'd like shrines
With off'rings of affection; for 'twas there
Towards the convent gates that Constance oft
Would take her morning stroll, or, with her book
'Twas there she sat beneath the olive-trees
And watch'd the monks, clad in their russet gowns,
Go forth in twos and threes, some bearing sacks
And empty baskets, making for the town
To beg or market. She would try to guess

140

What cause induced each individual
To live this life, and wove strange histories
Of blighted hopes, or unrequited love,
Or sad bereavement, making of the world
A place so desolate, that it were best
To shut its mem'ries out with iron gates
And massive walls; but these were only dreams
Of one who thought that all the world, like her,
Had lov'd and suffer'd;—this religious sect,
Mostly recruited from a peasantry
Sunk in the lowest depths of ignorance
And superstition, scarcely boasted one
Whose life would be more worthy to record
Than that of a dumb animal which toils
And helps to till the fertile earth, whose flow'rs
It is too dull and weary to admire—
For them no sentimental griefs of heart
Or morbid longings for a solitude
Remote from haunts of men! those iron ills
Of human life, disease and poverty,
Had driven fishermen too old to fish,
Or muleteers too lame to drive their mules,
Into this forced seclusion, nothing loth
They changed their well-worn homespun coats of blue

141

For the brown, heavy-looking, holy cloth
Of the Franciscan order;—ill they learnt
And even worse pronounced their Latin pray'rs,
These poor Italian peasants, but their dress,
Their shaven tonsures, and their sandal'd feet
Fill'd Constance with a sense of mystic awe—
To her they seem'd the pious chosen few
Who, for the love of Christ, had put away
Those evil lusts and longings of the flesh
So dear to man, and here in solitude
And constant pray'r had buried evermore
The recollections of their stormy lives.
Ah, all the storms they ponder'd on were those
Braved on that beautiful capricious sea
Which Constance lov'd; of these they often talk'd
With holy brethren—brethren once who shared
Their ocean perils and their finny spoil.
Within the cloisters of the nunnery
Which stood still further hidden in the hills,
There may, perchance, have throbb'd some heavy hearts

142

Stricken by arrows with a sharper point,
Inflicting pangs far more incurable
Than those of hunger, thirst, or rheumatism,
But yet the placid features of the nuns
Seem'd to belie this pitying surmise,
As Constance heard them, in their modest tones,
Give her a smiling blessing as they pass'd.
Of one of these, the sympathetic voice,
And dreamy eyes, made Constance feel for her
As for a friend. This sister show'd her o'er
The convent garden, gave her flow'rs and fruit,
And praised the while the peaceful pray'rful life
Led by herself and all the sisterhood.
“To know,” she said one day, as Constance paced
With this new-found companion up and down
The convent terrace (looking tow'rds the sea
And distant hills) “That sin can only live
“Outside the doors we close against the world—
“To feel that after God has lent us Life
“We give the gift He gave us back to Him—
“Devoting to such noble servitude
“The energies of body, mind, and soul—
“What greater happiness than this on earth?

143

“If, whilst our minds and our immortal souls
“Are fresh with all the warm enthusiasm
“Of our first years, what pious satisfaction
“If then for Him we mortify the flesh,
“And dedicate to Him each hidden thought,
“Each longing aspiration of the soul!
“And then the blessèd knowledge that our pray'rs
“May ease the punishments of purgatory,
“Earn'd and deserv'd by those departed souls
“Who sinn'd on earth, but which the gracious Lord,
“The blessèd son of Mary, condescends
“To mitigate and shorten; ponder well
“And ask that God may make you realize
“The sacred pow'r of pray'r—the bitter sin
“Of cold neglect.”
“Ah, these are thoughts indeed,”
Constance replied, “Would lure my heart to pray,
“Could I but learn to credit such a creed!
“Most touching is the beautiful idea
“Of intercession for the helpless dead;
“Ah, who would ever dare unclasp his hands
“Or rise from off his knees, could he but deem
“This sweet belief of your's were only true!
“But we are taught a less poetic faith,

144

“And this to us seems like a tender tale
“To tempt the knees to bend, and lift the hands
“Of those who would not truly pray for aught
“They could not measure, taste, or understand,
“Or else associate with sentiments
“Of earthly love and friendship, reaching on
“And thus continuing e'en after death.
“If what you think is true—is true indeed—
“I pray in time to bring my stubborn mind
“To know and feel its truth; yet, if 'tis false,
“Tho' sweet the thought of praying for the dead,
“I would not lean upon a fleeting shadow
“However fair! What can our finite minds
“Know of the dim hereafter of the soul?
“One man may dream his own belief the best,
“And force his obstinate idea of Heav'n
“Or Hell, upon the vacillating minds
“Of those who do not care to think themselves,
“And like to take religion ready-made—
“But 'tis the feeble sight of one poor worm
“Leading the others who are blinder still!
“For me, I trust; I do not think I feel
“Like some, the need that any one should pluck
“The skirts of God for me—reminding Him

145

“To pardon. Mercy is His attribute,
“And what seems good to Him, I know is good.
“I like to think He will be merciful,
“And that our too great self-abasement pains
“One who has made us for such noble things.
“He surely must have meant that we should work
“And seek ourselves the gifts we ask of Him—
“A troop of idle, cringing mendicants
“Must please Him less, tho' crouching at His feet,
“Than the brave man who feels responsible—
“Who fights his way and wins, and lays his crown
“Of laurels at his heav'nly Father's feet
“And gives him all the glory?
“All the hours
“You and the Sisters pass in asking gifts
“Might surely bring you better things at last,
“Could you but go with praises in your hearts
“Out into life, and in the striving world
“Meet and subdue the Great Antagonist,
“Instead of fleeing from him! You are good,
“And I, a sinner—so forgive these words
“From my unworthy lips! I should rejoice
“To leave the weary world, and come to you
“And live in peace and pray'r amongst these hills

146

“And happy olive-grounds; but that, to me
“Who have so sinn'd and striven, this, the life
“You lead, would seem too passive and inert
“Tho' 'tis a life free from the bitter sting
“Of self-reproach;—forgive me for my words.”
(There was a tinge in this, her argument
Of Geoffrey Denzil's subtler sophistry,
A few short years ago she had not dared
To speak thus boldly upon sacred things.)
Her words were in Italian, but the Nun
Answer'd her sadly in the English tongue—
“Dear lady, I am English, let us speak
“The language of the country I regret
“And fain would see again before I die.
“When two sad women, in a foreign land
“Led by the sacred sympathy of grief
“Thus seek companionship, and hope to find
“Not only this, but maybe friendship too,
“What need to deal in useless mysteries
“Or make concealments?”
Constance smiled, and said,
“You must have wonder'd at my awkward words
“Of bad Italian! May I ask you why

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“You left our native island? Do not heed
“My idle questions should they give you pain.”
“Alas,” the Sister answer'd, “Soon is told
“The reason of my choice; my life at home
“In England, was unfortunate, I came
“Hither to lose my sad identity;
“I have succeeded, by the grace of God,
“As a frail flow'r in this sweet southern garden
“Which may have been a seedling from the north,
“Expands into a glorious second life
“Forgetful of its storm-toss'd origin,
“So have I been re-born to taste those joys
“I knew not of, the Spirit's triumphing
“Over the fallen flesh.”
Impatient tears
Here fell from Constance's attentive eyes
As in the Sister's short biography
She traced a sad resemblance to her own.
The dew, so chilling after southern suns,
Was falling now, and ev'ry leaf and blade
Seem'd heavy with a sympathetic tear,
And Constance, shivering, drew on her cloak,

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Kissed the kind Sister on her sallow cheek,
And sped towards her little twinkling home.
All night she could not sleep, tho' worn and tired
She toss'd and turn'd, and ever and anon
Came to her mind Sister Theresa's words,
Which she repeated oft: “My life at home
“In England was unfortunate; I came
“Hither to lose my sad identity—
“I have succeeded.” . . .
Then at last she thought,
“I will give up the weary, wicked world,
“And live this idle, happy, pray'rful life
“Amongst the vines. Calm and self-satisfied,
“I may be spared the pain of many tears,
“And helpless, hopeless, longings to forget—
“Oh God, that it were possible to lose
“One hated, blessèd, haunting memory!”
Her head was aching, and she seem'd to hear
The jingling southern chimes, now faint and low,
Now clanging with a harsh and angry tone,
And hammering a fierce discordant knell
Into her fever'd brain. The empty room

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Seem'd full of chatt'ring strangers, pressing on
Into her presence; thro' the bolted doors
They seem'd to crowd and elbow one another—
She did not fear them, but she wonder'd why
The world had grown so small—so populous,
So noisy, and so sadly wearisome!—
She wonder'd at a thousand other things
Which had not seem'd so wonderful before
Compared this thing with that, and multiplied,
Subtracted—added—till her mind became
A prison-house of figures, struggling all
To make some given number. Then the twos
And threes and fours all suddenly became
Huge human forms; amazed and terrified,
She call'd for help against these horrid shapes,
And when the frighten'd servants heard her cries
They hasten'd to her, finding her alone
But raving in a fever; all her mind
Distorted, wand'ring and delirious,—
The secrets of her inmost soul let loose,
She call'd to Geoffrey, with a piteous cry,—
“Come back to me! deserted and alone
“I wander thro' the world and look for you!
“So desolate—so lonely—and so cold!”

150

(And here she shudder'd), then she rambled on
Of Roland and Sir John.
The doctor came,
And bled her, as Italian doctors bleed
Whenever they can find a fit excuse
To use their lancets. Then her auburn hair
He roughly cut with scissors, lest its weight
Should add towards the fever in her brain.
'Twas thus she lay for many weary days
Peop'ling an almost perfect solitude
With phantoms from the unforgotten past,
And seeming oftentimes to see in dreams
Her absent lover, with his earnest eyes
Gazing at her with anxious, loving looks,
And reading all the secrets of her soul.

151

When in our lives some evil change
Fills our sad eyes with transient tears,
If not from piety, we turn
From habit, to those stars that burn
With quiet sympathetic light
Up in the blue ethereal spheres—
Those far star-lands, where comets range
From time to time, and whence the sight
Uplifted, seems to meet the eyes
Of God, assuming planet guise,
Tho' heav'n-abiding, earthward bent
Towards our heavy eyes that weep:
Ah, little stars, your vigils keep
High in the distant firmament!
Visible witnesses to prove
That 'tis not only Death and Love
Which mortals may not comprehend,
For what you are, and whither tend
Your constellations, clustering
And clinging to the vault of heav'n
We know not, sadly wondering
All veil'd and blinded as we are,
Thoughtlessly worshipping that star
Maybe the omen of our end!
How dare we, till the clouds are riven
Shrouding our dull intelligence
Hope for encouragement from thence,
When e'en we know not what is best
For our own welfare day by day,
Obeying blindly the behest
Of hearts as changing as the waves,
Fickle and ignorant as they—

152

Mere puppets in some mighty hand
Luring us on to shoal or strand,
Or to mysterious ocean-caves,
Where our dead hearts may be the food
Of cruel syrens of the flood.
In vain I lift my tearful eyes
Towards th' impenetrable skies,
The careless stars vouchsafe no light
To show which path is wrong or right,
Without a hope, without a guide,
I seem a straw upon the tide
Of Life's inevitable stream;
All helpless to resist the flow
Of such a cataract, I seem
Without a will—would I could know
If it were best to trust my boat
Upon this mystic wave and float
Towards the ocean-gates, and be
Borne to the unfathomable sea?

153

VIII.

“Quan presto se va el placer,
Como despues de acordado
Da dolor;
Como, al nuestro parecer,
Qualquiera tiempo pasado
Fué mejor.”
Spanish Song.

“Comme on n'est jamais en liberté d'aimer ou de cesser d'aimer, l'amant ne peut se plaindre avec justice de l'inconstance de sa maîtresse, ni elle de la légèreté de son amant.” La Rochefoucauld.

After long days of fever and of pain
There comes a lull, which almost mimics death,
When the weak frame, which a false energy
Has fired with transient force, revives to find
The languid level of that listless life
Which surely follows on the fever's track.

154

Then one by one upon the wak'ning sight
Dawn the familiar objects; gradually
The doubtful, semi-dormant mind renews
Its old impressions, by the contrast made
Terribly sharp, expressive and distinct.
To Constance came this slow awakening
As from the past experience of a soul
Toss'd into port from some mysterious sea,
Quick-sanded, and of dangerous ebb and flow—
She look'd around, and saw the well-known room,
Her little bed within its arch'd alcove—
The painted chimney-board, and on a chair
She saw a pray'r book and a rosary
And the blue over-garment of a Nun—
A plate of oranges, some fresh cut flow'rs—
A heap of needle-work she noticed next—
And then the tall geranium-tree that climb'd
Up half the house, look'd thro' the window-pane
And nodded its red head, and seem'd to say
“Good morning! welcome back again to Life
And sunshine!”
Thro' the folding-doors ajar,
Which led into the little sitting-room,

155

She saw a bending form, and recognised
Sister Theresa's pallid pensive face—
Beside the open window at her work
She sat, her busy needle up and down
Plied without ceasing, whilst a moted beam
Of golden sunshine falling on her head,
Liken'd her to those pale prë-Rafaelite
Pictures of suff'ring saints, which seem to waft
A faint, sad, odour of asceticism
Down to these striving, money-making days
In which we live. Then, when her wand'ring eyes
Had seen the sister, with a gentle sigh
As of contentment, Constance turn'd aside
And fell into a quiet dreamless sleep.
Dreamless—yet often did she seem to feel
The vague and half-acknowledged influence
Of fond eyes looking at her whilst she slept,
Shedding on her their kind caressing beams.
And now and then, she saw upon the wall
The shadow of the Sister as she work'd,
Or leaning o'er her, list'ning if she breathed
Calmly and quietly, and once she thought
She heard some whisper'd words in that dear voice

156

She dared not ever hope to hear again
Save in such waking dreams.
Thus, half asleep
She floated on the quiet sun-lit hours
Back into life. The Sister rais'd her head
With propping pillows, read to her, and talk'd,
And told her stories of Italian life:
As thus the Nun was tending her one day
She fell asleep, and waking up refresh'd
As with returning strength, she softly rose,
Half dress'd herself, and looking in the glass
Miss'd her long auburn hair, and met a face
Looking like that of some sweet southern boy
With tender dreamy eyes, and curling hair
Cut closely round the little classic head.
She thought Theresa would be glad to see
How strong she was, and how her tender care
Had nurs'd her back to life. An exile here
She lifted up her grateful heart to God
Who thus had will'd that she should find a friend,
For in her desolation she had thought
That all the world abhorred and hated her.
Ah, when we deem we are deserted thus

157

What double tenderness and gratitude
We feel for those who even by mistake
Have thrown to us some little random word,
Some crumb of comfort! How the ready tears
Which would not rise to plead nor to resent,
Will flood our eyes when some kind stranger thus
Has heart to pity all the wounds of ours!
Much more did Constance feel indebted now
To this devoted woman, who had thus
Nursed her from Christian charity and love;—
She gently push'd the folding doors aside
And thinking but to see that placid face
She look'd into the sun-lit sitting-room.
She look'd, and all her re-awaken'd being
Flung to the winds its languid apathy,
Whilst all the blood in her impassive veins
Hasten'd tumultuously once more to warm
Her faded cheeks; for, looking out to sea
And seeming dark against its blue expanse
Framed by the flower-cover'd window-sill,
Sat Geoffrey Denzil, leaning on his hand
As plunged in thought.
With wild impatient eyes

158

She gazed on him who seem'd the 'live response
To those uncertain visions, which the night
Of Nature and of Reason had reveal'd
To her unquiet mind. Yes, there alone
He waited silently: she thought his face
Look'd older and more haggard than of yore,
Its features somewhat harder, and the lines
Which time or care had traced upon his brow
Seem'd written now in plainer characters.
As Constance look'd, she noted ev'ry turn
Of form and feature; Denzil's proud sad face
(The face she knew, and lov'd, alas, so well!)
Turn'd half aside, away from where she stood,
Showing the outline of his haughty brow,
His sunburnt cheek, and little pointed beard,
Resembled much that portrait of Van Dyke
Which the great master painted of himself,
Or even more those gallant cavaliers
Whose pictures deck'd the walls of Denzil Place.
Constance, with all a woman's instinct, guess'd
That this was not the first and only time
That Geoffrey Denzil, looking at the sea,
Had watched and waited near her all the day,

159

Hoping for happy tidings ev'ry morn
And sadly leaving, when the ev'ning light
Flush'd all the changeful Mediterranean,
The house where hover'd on the brink of death
The woman whom he lov'd:
She truly guess'd;
The peasants beating with their staves and canes
The purple berries from the olive-boughs,
Had often paus'd and watch'd with curious eyes
The figure of the tall young Englishman,
Who hasten'd ev'ry morning from the town
Towards the painted Villa Belvedere.
Arrested by no obstacle, he strode
O'er outspread olive-sheets, and often left
His footprints in the drying golden grains
Of Indian corn. Or, Briton-like, he leapt
Each rugged wall or pointed aloe-hedge
Which separated garden-grounds or groves
Of olive and of orange.
Well they knew
That either love, or some absorbing grief
Impell'd him thus, and for his handsome face
And careworn look, they smilingly forgave
His indiscriminating disregard

160

Of property or landmark. Ah, those days
Were days indeed of bitterness to him!
'Twas little wonder if his anxious face
Bore trace of all his spirit underwent
During this cruel time! Amongst his hair
(Had Constance follow'd blindly the advice
Of her impetuous heart, and with her arms
Encircled that dear head,) she would have seen
How many subtle little silver threads
Were coiled and intermingled with the brown,
For love of her!
For her!” Ah, reader, thou
Who with thy chaste and disapproving eye
May'st deign to read this simple history,
“Wise as a serpent, harmless as a dove,”
Let not the voice of thine immaculate heart
Go forth to judge my hapless heroine
Who was not fashion'd of that sterner stuff,
Fit to pursue the undeviating path
Of perfect wisdom! Surely to resist
With such an impulse tearing at her heart
Must prove at least she was not always weak;
So, pretty prude, read on, nor skip the page
Whereon no tale of amorous interview

161

Will cause thy gentle cheek to wear a blush,
For Constance, almost fearful as thyself,
Found strength to close the double folding-doors
As a defence against her guilty heart
And Geoffrey Denzil.
As he quickly turn'd
He only saw a flutt'ring muslin fold
Which somehow seem'd entangled in the door,
And then a wan white hesitating hand
Withdrew what might have been a flag of truce
To the reluctant warfare he had waged
For many weary days against his heart.
Thus Constance could be strong, and cruel too—
So Denzil thought, as fearing to pursue
The trembling fugitive who thus in haste
Regain'd the precints of the sanctuary,
He made one stride towards the closing door
And there remain'd discomfited and sad
With disappointment.
When the Sister came
She found poor Constance with a flutt'ring heart
And tearful eyes. “When did he come?” she ask'd,

162

“Ah, what avails to try and do the right
“And flee away from evil! For to me
“The earth contains not two more terrible things
“Than, or to see him or to see him not!
“Oh, tell me! did he come and seek me here
“Or did you guess my heart and send for him?
“He is the very dearest thing to me
“In all the world, and yet we are not wed!
“He liv'd quite near us in our country home—
“We used to wander in the summer woods
“And walk together thro' the rustling leaves
“Of Autumn; in the dismal winter days
“I long'd for light and warmth, and turn'd to him
“And seem'd to find them both;—he made the Spring
“Seem greener, fresher, and more full of hope—
“With him, each thing in nature grew to be
“More beautiful, and guessing not the cause,
“I let the days go by as in a dream—
“My husband was the kindest of old men—
“He trusted me too well, and then at last
“One day I found myself a guilty thing
“And so it happen'd.” . . . .
Then Theresa sigh'd
And said that often in the wicked world

163

Like tragedies occurred. “You are so help'd
“By ev'rything around you, to incline
“To Folly and to Sin; e'en you yourself
“Half charge the fields and flowers with your fault
“And hold the forest trees responsible,—
“But what of laughter, song, and merriment,
“The blaze of lights,—and music and the dance—
“The dress invented but to charm the eye?”
“It may be often thus,” Constance replied,
“But not with us, dear Sister; true we lov'd—
“But our's no mushroom-fancy in one night
“Forced into life; nor was our's sudden love
“Dancing to pleasant sound of pandean pipes
“And dying with the music;—when I die
“And not till then, will die in me this beam
“Off-shot from heav'n—this music of the spheres!
“Nay—I, alas, can plead no such excuse,
“For in almost as pure an atmosphere
“As that wherein you say your daily pray'rs,
“And summon'd by no more seductive strain
“Than the clear tolling of your convent bell,
“Sprang into life my fatal love for him.
“You are so good—you cannot understand—

164

“Ah, Sister, Love—than all the seven sins,
“Is surely far more difficult to quell!”
Theresa answer'd that she was not good
But a mere erring woman like herself—
Who had at last been led into the fold
Of the Good Shepherd.
“Women deem they love,”
She added, “But their love is writ on sand,
“To fade before the first encroaching wave
“Which sweeps away the letters, and the place
“Once fair and smooth again, they trace straightway
“Another name, which still another wave
“Will kiss to death.”
“Ah, cruel metaphor!”
Sigh'd Constance with a shudder. “Waves may come
“And men may come and go with changing forms,
“But in the world, to all eternity
“There lives one man—one only name to me!”
“Ah, ‘souvent femme varie,’” replied the Nun,
“But in this happy household where I dwell,
“(Where you may dwell if God vouchsafes you grace,)
“We serve one Master only, and admit

165

“Of no allegiance which is split in two—
“(You know the text—and how we may not serve
“Both God and Mammon.) What is earthly love?
“How can a passing passion take the guise
“And ape the majesty of higher things?
“We men and women are but floating straws
“On the inevitable stream of Destiny—
“We love not whom we would, and oft the heart
“Resists its fetters, but of what avail?
“Some secret current, such as will impel
“Two of these said poor straws to cling together,
“(United by the circlet of a bubble
“Which breaks and frees them lower down the stream)
“Inclines our human hearts to him or her,
“Or all as surely breaks the brittle bands
“Binding our fickle natures! Ere I sought
“This happy solitude, I knew the world,
“I heard Love spoken of, and did not shun
“The mention of his name; but I have liv'd
“And learnt, and I am older far than you,
“Ah, Love is bitterness! I had a friend . . . .
“One I knew well when I was of the world—
“And could I prove to you by her sad fate
“The little worth of all our human loves—

166

“The heart's unparalleled inconstancy—
“I would relate to you her history.”
“I wait to hear it,” Constance sadly said,
“And wish, indeed, you could invent some tale
“To teach me fickleness!”
Then said the Nun—
“A lady lov'd, and oftentimes she sigh'd
“To one who courted her on English soil,
“‘Alas, maybe I could have lov'd you once—
“‘But now too late! too late! it cannot be!
“‘My heart is far away in Hindostan
“‘Where braving for my sake the double ills
“‘Of heat and cold (the cold is at his heart
“‘For loss of me!) my lover toils to gain
“‘The gold with which to win me from the hands
“‘Of sordid parents,’ as she spoke one day,
“Open'd the door, and with a startled cry
“She fell upon the Anglo-Indian's breast
“Before that other man who lov'd her well—
“Then all her friends rejoiced, and she was wed,
“And he who lov'd her fled across the seas
“Unknown to her, in grief and bitterness;
“And she, too hurried almost, to reflect,
“Prepared to journey to that distant land

167

“To which her husband ow'd his growing wealth.
“Then all went well at first—amused she watch'd
“The curious elements of Indian life—
“And whilst she moved and journey'd all went well
“For at her heart there was an aching pain
“She sought to kill by constant restlessness
“And change of scene—and so the days went by;
“But when she came to Trichinopoly
“(One short day's journey from her future home,)
“She said to him (her husband,) ‘Leave me here,
“‘My sad, sad heart is broken—let me die—
“‘I lov'd the man I would not own I lov'd—
“‘You were so long away—I pray'd for you—
“‘I said so often that I lov'd you well
“‘I ended by believing what I said—
“‘Oh, curse me! put me from you! let me go!
“‘I cannot lie at night so near your heart
“‘When I am dreaming of that other man!’
“Her husband heard her—he was stern and cold,
“An Indian judge, (tho' in his secret heart
“Methinks he was in favour of Suttee,
“So firmly did he deem the marriage-tie
“Bound women to their lords in life and death!)
“He did as she desired—for, cursing her,

168

“He put her from him, and he let her go
“Back to the land where last she saw the man
“She really lov'd. Prepared to weather storms
“And bear for him disgrace and poverty—
“Prepared for him to live a life of sin
“So she might see his face and make it glad—
“She thus return'd; but with her reach'd the shore
“The tidings of an English victory,
“And then she heard how on Crimean heights
“This man she lov'd, and came to seek, had fall'n
“Fighting at Alma. Naught to her remain'd,
“The heart within her bosom seem'd to die—
“She forthwith said good-bye to all the world
“And took the vows of a poor Sisterhood
“As I have done.”
The tears were in her eyes
And Constance turn'd away to hide her own,
“So now she is a Nun,” she said, “like you—
“I pity her—and almost understand
“Her history—yet fear this heart of mine
“Is floating on a less uncertain sea—
“I dread that I shall love him till I die.”

169

I said “Ah, give me this! I shall not care
“What after-storms may beat, come blast and hail—
“Come all the ills that make the rest despair
I shall not care!”
I said “There is no good that can compare
“With this, that makes all other blessings pale,
“And if I lose e'en Heav'n, yet gain my pray'r
I shall not care!”

171

IX.

“With thee conversing I forget all time;
“All seasons, and their change, all please alike.
“Sweet is the breath of Morn, her rising sweet,
“With charm of earliest birds; pleasant the Sun,
“When first on this delightful land he spreads
“His orient beams on herb, tree, fruit, and flower,
“Glistening with dew; fragrant the fertile Earth
“After soft showers; and sweet the coming on
“Of grateful Evening mild; then silent Night
“With this her solemn bird, and this fair Moon,
“And these the gems of Heaven, her starry train;
“But neither breath of Morn, when she ascends
“With charm of earliest birds; nor rising Sun
“On this delightful land; nor herb, fruit, flower,
“Glistening with dew; nor fragrance after showers;
“Nor grateful Evening mild; nor silent Night,
“With this her solemn bird, nor walk by Moon,
“Or glittering starlight, without thee, is sweet.”
Milton.

Constance had listen'd with attentive ear
To this almost convincing argument
Proving a woman's instability
Of heart and purpose; but tho' pitying
Sister Theresa and the Indian Judge,
She would not own that the inconstancy

172

Of one weak woman, taught her firmer heart
To feel less fond or less unfortunate.
And then she thought, maybe, her kindly nurse
Had only introduced this anecdote
To change the dang'rous current of her thoughts
Centred on Denzil.
“But you did not say”
She pleadingly resumed, “how to this place
“So far away, so hidden from the world,
“He turn'd his footsteps, and thus found me out?”
Theresa told her then, in simple words,
The hist'ry of the strange coincidence
Of her first meeting Denzil; it was thus:
“When first you had the fever,” she began,
“(I knew it but by chance, when passing here
“To beg your contribution for the poor
“Your servants told me you were ill in bed;)
“I sought your side, and found your English maid
“Almost distracted with anxiety—
“Not understanding what the doctor said,
“And powerless to indicate her fears
“Or your requirements; so, she sat and wept,
“Whilst you were utt'ring wild delirious words.

173

“At first they all seem'd meaningless to me,
“But by and bye, a passionate appeal
“To some one it was evident you lov'd
“Named ‘Geoffrey’ warn'd me that you might commit
“Some indiscretion of speech, and lest your maid
“Should hear your words, I sent her from the room,
“My pretext, that a fever such as your's
“She too might sicken with, and be to you
“A mere incumbrance, rather than a help.
“'Twas thus I came to be alone with you,
“And then it was that all your random words
“Of self-reproach, and those impassion'd names
“You call'd your absent lover, touch'd my heart
“And told me half the truth; and now I fear'd
“To summon to your side your lawful lord
“Lest I should bring some dark avenging shape
“To what I guess'd might be your hiding-place.”
(Here Constance could not help a furtive smile
At the idea these passing words call'd up
Of good Sir John, with rosy wrinkled face,
In Hessian boots and gold-rimm'd spectacles,
Who did not seem to answer to the name
Of ‘dark avenging shape.’)
The Nun went on—

174

“But when I ask'd your maid, I heard from her
“That he you raved of was your husband's friend,
“Seeming almost his son,—so well-belov'd,
“By all your household honour'd and revered,
“And ‘Would that he were here!’ the girl exclaim'd.
“So, thinking it were sad to die alone
“(For then I trembled lest you might not live,)
“I wrote a letter to that absent one
“Of whom you raved; I did not need to ask
“What name he bore, since o'er and o'er again
“You moan'd it in the watches of the night,
“Beseeching you might see him once again—
“I soon discover'd also where he dwelt,
“And praying God would pardon me the sin
“Of bringing thus two erring human beings
“Together, that one parting soul might speed
“Peaceful and satisfied, (if both indeed
“Had lov'd and err'd) I hasten'd to the town
“Bearing my letter thither, and therein
“I told of how you lay upon the brink
“Of Death and darkness, and of how your lips
“Had oftentimes repeated o'er his name—
“And how I heard he was your husband's friend,
“Of whom I only knew he was not here—

175

“And you were lonely;—that from this I fear'd
“You might be shadow'd by some passing cloud
“Of his displeasure—then I said to him
“That he would know, and he would surely write
“And solve what seem'd the myst'ry of your life,
“And tell me how to act; then full of doubts
“I sign'd and seal'd it.
“When I reach'd the post
“I gave my letter that it might be weigh'd,
“And as that lazy old Antonio,
“(The bent, grey-bearded man—the man you know,)
“Turn'd o'er the letter in his dirty hand,
“He, spelling the direction, told me how
“An Englishman had been that very day
“Asking for letters to that self-same name—
“I marvell'd much at such a strange event,
“And learning where he sojourn'd, sought him out,
“And it was truly he to whom I wrote,
“His name was Geoffrey Denzil.”
“Say again,”
Cried Constance, wildly starting up in bed,
“What was his name? Repeat it once again,
“I love to hear it from another's lips
“The while I try to make myself believe

176

“I hear it for the first and only time—
“And try to wonder how its sound would seem
“Were it once more indifferent to me
“As when I had not known him! but alas,
“This is a kind of silly childish game
“I play at, trying to deceive my heart—
“In vain, in vain! I cannot now recall
“Even these few impressions of a Past
“In which he was not! Tell me what he said
“When first he knew I was so near to him,
“And ill, and asking for him day and night?”
“Ah,” said Theresa, “you were ill indeed
“And near to death, or else you would have felt
“His wild despairing kisses on your brow,
“Your lips, your hair, your hands—”
“What! was he here,
“Here in this very room?” poor Constance cried
Shock'd and bewilder'd, and yet glad at heart—
“Yes, he seem'd mad, he would not be denied,
“And I was weak—and you were so, so ill!
“Ah, how he loves you!” . . . . . .
Constance seem'd to feel
A sudden rush of happiness and health,

177

“To-morrow I shall rise and dress,” she said,
“And feel as strong as felt my former self,
“And you will let him find me sitting there
“Beside the window. I will see him once,
“And thank him for his love, and say ‘good-bye.’”
“Then you are strong indeed,” the Sister said,
“If half the world had strength for such ‘good-byes’
“How far more blest the other half had been!
“How many had been happier, or unborn!”
Good-bye, good-bye! ah, easy little word
When two fond, foolish, lovers, say it o'er,
And make it but the plausible excuse
To meet once more to say it once again!
Ah, sweet indeed those make-believe farewells,
With that dear head on our too happy breast,
And those sweet eyes the brighter for their tears,
And that fond, flutt'ring, heart, that starts and throbs,
But will not break at any rate to-night!
Good-bye, good-bye! and once again good-bye!
But there are real farewells, when haggard-eyed
We stare all tearless, and with silent lips,
At one who once has made our life a dream

178

Of happiness, well knowing we must wake
And live thro' bitter morrows! These are times
When to our own deceitful selves we say
“This is real sorrow, all that came before
“Was but a mere delusive mockery,
“Only assumed to make another sad,
“Or acted, as an actor plays a part
“For self-advancement;—this is pain at heart,
“This—this is desolation!”
Even thus
Constance and Geoffrey felt that they could face
And bear those false farewells of ev'ry day,
Whilst yet they fear'd to say that fatal word
Which almost seem'd another name for death.
She had indeed, in agitated tones,
(With many timid glances at the door,
As tho' she fear'd the eye of Miss L'Estrange,)
Implor'd of Geoffrey Denzil to depart—
And she had held his hand, and said ‘goodbye’
And sad ‘God-bless-yous,’ and her eyes were wet,
Yet Denzil did not leave her, for he said
(Making his conscience readily his dupe,
And almost in a voice of indignation,)

179

“How can I leave you in a foreign land,
“Deserted, ill, and suff'ring, and for me
“Bearing humiliation and disgrace?
“The common laws of cold civility—
“Humanity,—the merest loosest bond
“Of careless passing friendship, would demand
“That having met you here, by accident,
“I stay at least till you are strong and well.”
And Constance, loving, temporising, weak,
Had felt a burden lifted from her heart,
And echo'd softly Geoffrey Denzil's words,
“When I am well . . .” and thus it was he stay'd.
How had they met? Was Constance cold and stern,
And Geoffrey like the Spartan youth of old
Who nursed without complaint his gnawing fox?
I do not know exactly how they met—
Perchance as mortals made of moulded ice,
Without emotion, or as you or I
Had met again, after suspense and doubt
Our own true love, on an Italian eve,
Alone, save for a little crescent moon
No thicker than an eye-lash, or a “C”—
(A waning moon, for when she first appears

180

She forms a sulky “C” that turns its back
And will not be a letter, come what may,
Whilst Denzil on this happy ev'ning saw
On looking up, for very joy, to heav'n,
Her dear initial shining in the sky
Seeming to bid him hope!) . . . . .
Some weeks from then
They sat together 'neath the spreading shade
Of a thick twisted chesnut tree, with stem
Of giant girth; amongst the herbage green
Were feeding parti-colour'd sheep and goats,
And here and there were scatter'd moss-grown rocks,
Fall'n from the shadowing mountain years ago,
Seeming like lesser mountains, lately born,
Uplifting pigmy peak and spur, that rose
Piercing the velvet breast of Mother Earth.
Here, far beyond the convent in the hills,
The landscape wore a less Italian look,
The ground was grassy as an English lawn,
And the light-colour'd green of chesnut leaves
Replaced the sombre olive. From the hills
Two mountain torrents, free'd from Winter's thrall,
Which erst had turn'd them into silent snow,

181

As tho' rejoicing in their liberty,
Rush'd headlong to the sea, and meeting here
Mingled their waters, and triumphantly
With noise, henceforth proclaim'd themselves a stream
Of some importance, bearing as they did
On their united tides the fallen trunks
Which, higher up, the busy wood-cutters
Sent without further trouble to the town
For sale and export. With a thund'rous noise
These floating corpses of departed trees
Hurl'd down each shelving wat'ry precipice,
Met the huge rocks which form'd the landing-place
To some such other stair; there paused a space,
And then, envelop'd in a cloud of spray
Once more awoke the echoes.
Hitherto
Constance had fear'd to seek this spot alone,
Or even with the gay Italian girl
Who led her mule; for kind old Angela
(Her gard'ner's wife,) had shown to her one day
The shaggy skin of a devouring wolf
Shot in this very place some years ago
By a brave son of her's who since had died,
And Constance was a coward, dreading beasts

182

And birds of prey, and monsters of the deep,
Far more than moral dangers, which no sword
Or mortal's gun, however ably aim'd
Can stab or kill; but God who made the heart
Implants in each its diff'rent form of fear,
And oftentimes we shun the lesser harm
Yet coax some cunning danger to our breast
Which, serpent-like, will sting our trusting heart
Or foolish feeding hand;—but now she felt
No fear of mountain wolf or forest snake,
Since he was near who was so brave and strong,
For something in his presence there convey'd
To her a sense of safety from all ill.
Constance was working, and she did not speak,
And Geoffrey, stretch'd full length upon the grass,
Had just been reading, now he paused, and propped
His small uplifted head upon his hand,
And Constance felt his eloquent grey eyes
Fix'd on her own, which droop'd upon her work.
He spoke at length, but did not speak of love,
For it is possible to love, and lie
Upon the sward at the Belovèd's feet,
And yet give utt'rance but to careless talk

183

Of bird, or tree or flow'r, or even things
Seemingly more removed than these from love.
Thus Denzil spoke, for by a mutual bond
These two had bound themselves that whilst they stay'd
Together in the South, (he at the town,
And she amongst the olives,) they would shun
That fatal subject, and that they would be
Dear and united friends and nothing more.
They watch'd each other keenly, fearing lest
One or the other should o'erpass the bounds,
And proving himself (or herself) too weak,
Should break the compact,—slave to mem'ries past
Or to some dream of futures false and fair.
But they had hitherto been true and stern—
True to their stern resolve; it may have been
Because they felt that ev'ry little word
Was brimming over with that subtle sense
Apparent in their very breath, which tried
To breathe of lawful things, and thus that theme,
Unutter'd, and yet always understood,
They did not need to christen by its name,
But as a fav'rite child is often call'd
By one far less harmonious than its own,

184

From sheer excess of fondness, so they shunn'd
Shame-faced and shy, the tell-tale name of “Love”
Knowing they lov'd too well! 'Twas thus each word
Seem'd but an ugly nickname for the one
They dared not utter. But each understood.
So when she said
“Hark to that thund'ring sound!
“Is it a coming storm or floating tree
“Striking against the rocks?” then unto him
Her words would seem to say—
“Ah, I was frail!
“I drifted with the tide—the headlong stream
“Wreck'd me against a rock, yet I rejoice
“To wreck upon a rock I love so well—
“Alas, I love you—love you! pity me
“And love me as I love!” And when he said
Some trivial words like these
“Ah, do not fear,
“No coming storm is clouding o'er the sky,
“'Tis but the floating timber which the stream
“Is bearing to the sea,” it seem'd to her
As tho' he said—
“Ah, darling, do not fear!
“For I am strong as yonder rapid stream,

185

“And I will bear you safely to the sea
“Whither all journey; put your trust in me
“And love me as I love.”
But ere they reach'd
This seeming state of perfect self-control,
There were so many problems to explain,
So that from time to time they were constrain'd
To dwell upon the Past. How Geoffrey came
To be alone at Denzil Place that night?
Why Constance, too, was waking at that hour?
The fragments of the letter she had found
In Denzil's writing? First, why Geoffrey came.
He told her how a distant relative
Had died, and he was summon'd to return
To England, which he had but lately left;
How, on arriving there, he found some chance,
(Some wish to spite the kinsman who till then
Had hoped to be his heir,) had made him leave
To Geoffrey Denzil half his property—
How he, too sad to be rejoiced at this,
(Since now he had surprised his fatal love,
And made a vow that he would never harm
But keep as pure as is the driven snow

186

The mem'ry of his idol)—had resolved
That, as he needs must visit Denzil Place,
To take some papers from an iron safe,
Relating to his new inheritance,
He would not do so till the silent night—
So, saying as a pretext, at the inn,
That he desired they would not tell Sir John
Of his arrival, lest the good old man
Should deem he trespass'd, staying at the Hall
When Denzil was in England; he arranged
To ride there when the household were in bed,
Awaited only by his ancient nurse,
Who, telling him the house was plunged in sleep,
Had led him to the silent library
And left him to his search; the rest we know.
His letter was a lover's rhapsody,
To be deliver'd if his love surviv'd
Her husband and himself; for in his heart
Had lurk'd a wish that she might some day know
How he had lov'd her once. Therein he told
The guilty reason of his sudden flight,
And after telling how he strove in vain
To school his wayward heart, he wrote these words,

187

Which Constance partly read at Denzil Place—
“That you should be another's—you who seem
“Created to be mine in ev'ry sense
“In which a woman may belong to man—
“Whom, after all these waiting years, I meet
“At last; it almost seems too hard to bear,
“But so it is, and I must go from hence!”
Then Geoffrey spoke of strange affinities,
And how a woman, meeting such a man,
Reads on his brow that he is lord of her—
The lover of her life; and how a man
Who meets a certain maid (or e'en, alas!
A certain matron,) murmurs to himself
“This is the woman who was made for me
“To love and cherish!”
He reminded her
What dress she wore the first time they had met;
And Constance, with a flutter at her heart,
Remark'd how ev'ry detail was described,
Omitting nothing. “It was all of white,
The day was warm and sunny, and you stood
Framed for awhile inside the open door,
And looking like an angel—in your hand

188

You held your gloves and shady garden-hat—
Your hair was knotted with a color'd snood
To suit the floating coral-color'd sash
That bound you, like a baby, round the waist,
And then you spoke—! You seem'd so young and fair
That I, who then had neither care nor creed,
Adopted you at once as patron saint,
And afterwards—you know—”
Then Constance sigh'd,
“With me, I think it must have been the Fire
“And seeing you so very near to death.”
“The Fire with you,” said Denzil, “but with me
“Not only fire, but ev'ry element—
“Earth, Air, and Fire, and Water, all combined
“To tell me how I hunger'd for your heart
“Long, long, before you told me it was mine!
“I said ‘Whatever comes I shall not care
“If without harming her, I win her love’—
“But when I thought my wicked lawless will
“Had wrought you harm, a prey to deep remorse
“I fled in horror at my evil deed
“And call'd myself a villain.
“You were kind”
(Constance had said) “to spare my guilty soul

189

“The pain of this reproach;—I always fear'd
“That you would taunt me, I, who must have seem'd
“So prudish, and so full of texts and saws—
“I fear'd that you would mock me, and exclaim
“‘Ah, hypocrite! where is your wisdom now!’”
“And you were also kind,” said Denzil then,
“To spare me, or, with that old Tiger-Cat
“Who in her letter call'd me ‘Atheist
“You might have deem'd it was my lack of cant
“That made me love you; and once having lov'd
“Stretch forth my robber-hand to steal my prize—
“Look in your glass, and see what to have seen
“Had conquer'd Christian Knight or Saracen—
“There is no question of this creed or that
“When once we kneel to Woman as to God!”
“A god of clay,” said Constance with a sigh,
“A shadow on a stream—a fleeting thing—
“Lasting whilst Beauty lasts—it dies with Death,
“And blessèd is that woman who may be
“Even a mem'ry!”
So the days pass'd by
And thus these wicked people liv'd and lov'd.

191

You said to me, in that sad hour of parting,
So much, so little, and yet ev'rything—
My eager lips, so rudely interposing,
Broke the soft sounds your own, maybe, had murmur'd
In that dim hour of silence! Tho' of sorrow
It seem'd the cup was fill'd to overflowing
I could not weep, for joy at being near you,
And guessing all the words you left unspoken,—
So much—so little—and yet ev'rything!
You gave to me, on that dear night of parting,
So much, so little, and yet ev'rything—
So little to the hunger of my longing—
So much to meet the measure of deserving,
And ev'rything of heaven in a moment—
Oh, cruel Time! oh, midnight chimes that sounded!
Yet, in your arms, how dared I curse the moments
Which brought with all their dread of desolation
So much, so little, and yet ev'rything?
You seem'd to me in that last hour of parting
So much, so little, and yet ev'rything—
‘So much, so little!’ . . . Loving, yet divided
For ever from me:—in the hated future
Link'd with another;—madly lov'd—‘not wisely,’
Met all too late, and lending love and sunshine
And all delight, and leaving, (had you left me,)
Only a memory of vanish'd beauty
To be to me for ever and for ever,
So much, so little, and yet ev'rything!

193

X.

“Rappelle-toi, lorsque les destinées
M'auront de toi pour jamais séparée,
Quand le chagrin, l'exil et les années
Auront flétri ce cœur désespéré,
Songe à mon triste amour, songe à l'adieu suprême;
L'absence ni le temps ne sont rien quand on aime;
Tant que mon cœur battra
Toujours il te dira
Rappelle-toi.”
Alfred de Musset.

“Oh, my love! my love!
“Have we now reach'd the end of these dear groves?
“Shall we together walk no more thro' life?
“The arid desert stretches out beyond;
“Across it lies a pathway rough with stones
“And edged with tangled briars. No grateful shade,
“No grassy banks afford the Traveller rest,
“And thou would'st have me wander there alone,
“An outcast from our garden Paradise,
“And far from thee, my love, my soul's delight!
H. P. Campbell.

At length arrived those last unwelcome days
Which heralded that last sad day of all,
When those who, haply, never should have met,
Felt bound in honor, or, to say farewell,
Or else to let the angry world go by
And cling together; she to bear the shame,

194

And he the keen reproach of having caused
Such shame in her. For Constance, who was weak,
And influenced above all influence
By him she lov'd, had deem'd it would be best
(Now she could never more on bended knee
Appeal to God but as a guilty thing,)
That she should honestly avow her love,
And live to be his wife, at least in heart,
Who vow'd to her his life's fidelity.
Often in vain she look'd across the sea
When Denzil left her at the ev'ning hour,
Hoping to read upon the pink expanse
Some sign or symbol telling how to act.
She often long'd to open wide her arms
And say to Denzil, “Geoffrey, I am your's
“In life—in death!” if it were but to see
The cloud uplift which shrouded that dear brow!
But, as he left those happy olive-grounds,
And ere he vaulted o'er the boundary
Dividing town from country, 'neath the shade
Sister Theresa, in her quiet dress
Would glide in silence thro' the garden gate,
And seeking Constance, in an earnest voice

195

Would strive to exorcise the sinful thought,
And seem to treat the sacred name of Love
As a mere thing of naught—a childish thing.
“There are some moments in our lives” she said
“When we can almost see (both seem so plain!)
“The fair good angels pointing out one way,
“And on the other side the pow'rs of hell
“Who strive to drag us trembling to the brink
“Of some abyss! Not that I deem your friend,”
(She added, in a calm prosaic tone,)
“Poor Mr. Denzil, who seems kind at heart,
“A demon in disguise, but lawless love
“Must needs assume to all discerning eyes
“A shape of dread, a form to be abhorred.”
“And are not lack of candour and deceit,”
Constance exclaim'd, “two things to be abhorred?
“And dwelling underneath a shelt'ring roof
“Respected, when you have not earn'd respect,
“And living as a wife with one you wrong—
“Next him at night, and near him all the day,
“And longing all those nights and all those days
“For but one glimpse of one sad absent face,

196

“Are these not also things to be abhorred?
“Methinks I could return to Farleigh Court,
“If I might hide away amongst the woods,
“And pray, and read good books, and nurse a skull
“Like yon sweet picture of the Magdalen—
“But to go back to him who knows my fault,
“And screens me out of kindness from the scorn
“Our country neighbours would but be too glad
“To show'r upon me! They must guess the truth,—
“From what the sister of my husband said
“They even knew it long before myself—
“I know not which would be the worst to bear,
“My husband's kind forbearance, or the sneers
“Of those who, whilst they flatter'd to my face
“Would whisper cruel words behind my back—
“And then I never could see Geoffrey more
“It will be hard to bear!”
Now this was how
It came to pass that Constance dream'd at all
Of leaving Italy and going home.
Roland L'Estrange had written to her twice—
At first, a school-boy letter, full of tales
Of work and holiday, yet such good will

197

Was shown in every simple blotted line,
That Constance knew Sir John had kept his word,
And had not tried to influence his son
Against his erring wife.
“My father's hand
“Is crippled with the gout, he begs me say”
The letter ran,) “or he would write himself.”
From gratitude, Constance had rashly sent
When next she wrote, a timid message back,
Hoping the crippled hand was nearly well—
Whereat another letter from the boy
Had plainly ask'd of Constance to return.
For, all went wrong, he said, now she was gone—
The servants left—his Aunt was, oh, so cross!
She finally had quarrell'd with Sir John
And left him all alone to grief and gout—
His father said all luck had left the house
Since she was taken ill and went abroad!
Then, lastly came a letter from Sir John
Entreating her return, and “All the Past
Should be forgotten,” only she must come;
And both these letters had for many days

198

Remain'd unanswer'd, whilst poor Constance felt
Torn, or by fiends and angels, or by Love
And sterner Duty, first this way or that,
Whilst all her mind, and all her anxious heart
Were tortured and bewilder'd by the thought
Of what her final answer ought to be
When ev'rybody's welfare seem'd to her
So much at variance!
Then to the winds
Did Geoffrey Denzil fling his good resolves,
And madden'd at the dread of losing her
He strove with might and main to make her stay
Until Sir John might hear the scandal breathed
And drive her from him into Denzil's arms
To be his very own for evermore.
“I swear if any child were born of you,”
He said to her one balmy afternoon,
“I would not press you, Constance, but you leave—
“In leaving home for me, what do you leave?
“A kind old man, but he can be replaced—
“You cannot even know the pleasant pang
“A bride may feel, who leaves the loving breast
“Of her fond mother for the folding arms

199

“Of her Belov'd;—you are not kith or kin,
“But mated by mischance, who might have been
“Father and daughter, child and grandfather—
“The long, dull years that seem your married days,
“To him are but a little speck of time—
“A fleeting moment in an old man's life
“Who liv'd and lov'd long, long ere you were born!
“Ah, he may miss you, as those fathers miss
“Or as those grandfathers, a two years' child,
“But think of what we are! Friends—friends till death,
“And lovers—loving till this heart of mine
“Ceases to beat, and husband, dear, and wife,
“If you will let me call you by that name
“And wear my ring upon your little hand.
“I say again, if round about your knees
“Were rosy faces grouped, and tiny hands
“And piping voices, ever and anon
“Clasping and calling you to stay at home,
“I had been base indeed to bid you stray
“And leave for me those sunny little heads
“But now—!”
(Here Constance press'd against her brow
A trembling hand, whilst with the other one

200

She gently push'd away her tempter's lips,
And tried to think he was a “Pow'r of Hell.”)
“Nay, I would rather,” Denzil wildly cried,
“Much as I loathe the superstitious creed
“That dooms a woman to a life unlov'd
“Of penance and seclusion, that you went
“And prison'd your sweet youth within the walls
“Of yonder convent, than that you should go
“Seeking yourself, and of your own free will
“The hateful life you used to live before!”
Then soften'd by her scared bewilder'd look,
He added, “I am mad, and seem to you
“To utter foolish words;—do what is best
“For you, my darling; should you feel one day
“The bitterness of parting with all joy,
“(Such as I feel to-day), come back to me
“And we will try to make, despite the World,
“A new fair life together; I shall wait.”
Thus torn and tortured with conflicting doubts
Did Constance travel thro' these latter days
(For such she deem'd they were,) in Italy.
Her lover's passionate entreaties now

201

Tearing her gentle heart; and then the Nun's,
Who seemed to see to ev'ry complication
One only answer, one sure remedy
Against the Future's perils, and implored
That she would forthwith give herself to God,
And “'prison her sweet youth” (as Denzil said)
Within the quiet convent in the hills.
From no vain wish to be “sensational”
Or blend into her life the picturesque
And hollow teachings of an alien creed,
Did Constance entertain the wav'ring thought
Of yielding to the Sister's stern advice.
She knew that there were many knotty points
Of doubt and darkness she must overcome—
That many new convictions should be born,
And many old associations slain,
Ere she could honestly embrace a faith
In which she was not born; but then she thought
A calm devotional life of high intent,
Must needs be pleasing in the eyes of God
By whatsoever name its votaries
Were call'd and recognized throughout the earth;
Also, within her bosom, next her love,

202

Liv'd that unutt'rable desire for rest,
Known only unto those whose hapless fate
Has ever been to battle with the waves,
When they would fain have waited on the shore,
Nor e'er adventured on the stormy seas.
So, thus it stood—she purposed to return
To Farleigh Court, to see Sir John once more
And try to bear the life she once had borne;
But should she prove too burden'd with her Past
To live such life in peace and honesty,
Then she would bid farewell to all the world,
And seeking once again this sunny clime,
Would try and live, as liv'd of old the saints,
A life of penitence and piety—
And should this life, after the 'portion'd time
From lack of faith, seem all too hard to bear, . . . .
“Then” Denzil cried, “Tho' there are convent walls
“Yet there are those who fain would scale and climb
“E'en higher walls, to bear away from thence
“Their only happiness!”
So, of these ways—
The three opposing pathways left to tread—
Constance had tried to follow first the best,
If not the brightest; whilst that sunny line

203

Of flower-spangled path, she strove to shun
Even in fancy.
Then the days slipp'd by
And Geoffrey Denzil grew an alter'd man,
Haggard and desperate, and full of fears,
And Constance too, was pale and wan, and felt
Against her heart a weary gnawing pain;
And thus arose the sun upon the day
Before the one when they were doom'd to part.
Sad and remorseful, Constance mark'd the change
Her resolution wrought in Denzil's face
And voice and bearing, and she wonder'd much
How any one so weak and frail as she
Could thus subdue and conquer one so strong,
Who ne'er had seem'd disturb'd by greater things.
On this last day, about the sunset hour
They wander'd forth together, each one sad,
Prë-occupied and silent; as they walk'd
Their thoughts went winging o'er the glitt'ring sea
Homeward to England, and they liv'd again
In fancy, thro' that night at Denzil Place,

204

Which seem'd to mark an epoch in their fate.
I know not if 'twas wholly with remorse
That Denzil mused upon those midnight hours
Which gave to him the woman of his dreams,
Or whether even Constance, as she gazed
Into the eyes of him she lov'd so well,
Felt all the anguish she had known before
At having once been ev'rything to one
To whom, alas, she soon would be as naught
Save a fair clinging memory!
At first
They bent their way towards the neighb'ring town,
And stroll'd mechanically down the quay,
And saw and heard, as in a waking dream,
The sights and sounds around them, all the while
Feeling like beings from some other sphere
Dropp'd down from cloud-land. Ev'rything they saw
On this too mournful day seem'd so distinct
And yet so lifeless, since these lookers-on
Had concentrated all they own'd of life
On one another; so like changing scenes
Painted upon a magic lantern's slides
All seem'd a mockery, yet afterwards
Recurred to them each passing sight they saw

205

On that last day, and that sad parting night,
With haunting vividness.
Upon the strand
The red-capp'd fishermen—the idle throng
Of chatt'ring beggars standing on the bridge,
The peasant-women in their shady hats
Guarding their fragrant store of fruit and flow'rs
Beside the market-cross. Then in the streets
The gaily-colour'd awnings, shadowing
The windows bright with rich Italian wares,
The gold and silver works in filigree,
The shining coral, carv'd in many shapes—
Then grouped in twos and threes about the port
Some few departing townspeople were seen,
Bound for a neighb'ring city; two who seem'd
To part in sorrow, since with many sighs
They clung and wept, a maiden and a youth,
Doubtless affianced, for, before the hour
When rang the signal for the speeding boat
To bear the youth away from her he lov'd,
They traced upon a dusty prickly-pear
The link'd initials of their hapless names.
Then, to the left, another couple stood
Taking their leave; two shovel-hatted priests,

206

Who, following the custom of the South,
Were taking snuff and kissing one another,
And op'ning wide their black embracing arms.
A little further, on the other side,
The town became a stragg'ling colony
Of painted villas,—here they saw a goat
Standing in biped-fashion, on a wall,
Reaching his greedy shaggy-bearded mouth
Towards the blossoms of a Judas-tree
All pink and leafless, looking as he stood
As one might deem the false Apostle look'd
With russet beard, his God-forsaken gaze
Seeking some branch of a sufficient strength
Whereon to hang himself, (for Rumour saith
From some such pink pre-destin'd gallows-tree
Swung, long ago, the suicided form
Of the accursèd Jew, Iscariot,
Who thus escaped the torments of remorse
Earn'd by his base betrayal of the Christ.)
Thus wand'ring listlessly, they reach'd at last
A garden they had often sought before,
Where Constance used to sketch, for here it seem'd
That Nature, Art, and Past and Present join'd

207

To make an earthly Eden;—it had been
Long years ago, a Roman residence
Of some importance, and tho' ruin'd now
And desolate, its beauty still survived
To lure all lovers of the picturesque.
Here stately terraces of sculptured stone
Look'd seaward, where against the ev'ning sky
The marble statues of forgotten gods
Uprose alternately with flow'ry urns
O'errun with clematis; from thence a walk,
Dark and mysterious e'en at noon-tide heat,
But now a seeming subterranean arch
Of arbutus and bay-trees, led the way
Towards a small pavilion, ruin'd too
And long ago deserted.
Geoffrey turn'd,
Uncheck'd by Constance, down this dim arcade
Where now and then a moonbeam sifted thro'
The mingling branches, threw a silv'ry streak
On the untended path, and but for which
They scarce had seen their way, and could but feel
The scarlet berries of the arbutus
Which roll'd like coral beads about their feet.

208

Here was a bench, built in a stone recess
O'ertraced with scroll-work, near the grey remains
Of what had been of yore a Roman bath,
Where Constance, who was weary with her walk,
Sank down exhausted—Denzil held her hand,
And both were silent, for their hearts were full.
(Deem it not strange that they should roam so late
Fair reader, who hast never left thy home
After the few first flittings of the bat!
For, where the sun is lavish with his beams
As in these southern lands, this is the hour
When those who dread his fierce meridian heat,
Go forth, approved by custom, 'neath the rays
Of a more temperate planet; hence they stay'd.)
Upon the terrace, like a row of ghosts,
They saw the moonlit glories of the past
Silv'ry and silent, and from time to time
Some echo reach'd them wafted from the town
Of song or music, but these died away
At last, in silence, and the croaking frogs,
And now and then a falling leaf or fruit,
Or the clear piping of a nightingale,
Alone recall'd their spirits back to earth.

209

For both seem'd lost in some absorbing dream
Impossible to utter or translate
Into material language; thus for hours
They scarcely spoke, until they heard the chimes
Of midnight, echo from the noisy spires
Of all the many churches of the town.
Then Constance, frighten'd at the flight of time,
Would fain have hurried to her quiet home,
But ere she rose, the ghastly haunting dread
That this might be her last and only hope
Of playing truant thus, induced her still
A little while to linger: Denzil then
Awaking from his mournful reverie,
Held fast her hands, as one in shipwreck clings
To spar or mast, or as a miser grasps
Some cherish'd treasure he is soon to lose,
Whilst all the pent-up anguish in his heart
He strove to ease by his impassion'd words
Of love and mad reproach, for by those chimes
He knew how soon they needs must say farewell.
Ah, if in that despairing parting hour
All the wild grief they felt at sev'ring thus,

210

Or all the bliss at being side by side—
If their warm youth, and the delicious South,
And ev'ry soft intoxicating sound
Breathing of amorous and intensest life
Fed with sweet odours;—if all this conspired
To vanquish their too sternly sterile vows—
If ev'ry little faint malicious flow'r,
And ev'ry cunning little croaking frog—
And ev'ry happy hanging orange-orb
And tender bridal-bud,—if all these seem'd
But small familiar echoes from the voice
Of Nature, which invited them to join
In her regardless self-abandonment,
So doubly dangerous when both the hearts
That beat in unison, love with a love
Which ‘passeth knowledge,’ if—but wherefore muse
On that which Night, and Solitude, and Love
Witness'd alone? unless the cypress too,
Or dark arbutus, with its scarlet fruit,
May silently have listen'd to their vows
Or shudder'd at their long, forbidden kiss!—
These folded in their dim mysterious shade
The two poor lovers, as they sought the town,
Clinging together sadly to the last,

211

Or arm in arm, or holding hand in hand
Like little children.
Down the walk they pass'd;
The East was red, and speeding on the wings
Of Destiny, they saw the boding signs
Of dread To-morrow. Near the fading moon
Their enemy lay blushing o'er the hills.

213

To my heart I waking, say
“This must be Love”
As the first strugg'ling ray
Of the too happy day
Peeps from above.
“Ah, this must be Love,” I sigh
When the dim light
Fades from the western sky,
And the far mountains lie
Wrapp'd in the night.
If thou had'st not dawn'd, oh Day!
Then, blessèd Night,
Thou had'st endured for aye,
Stay, night of kisses, stay!
Veil out the light!
If thou had'st not darken'd, Night,
Then, happy Day,
Thou had'st shone long and bright,
Fleet day of dear delight
Fade not away!
Oh, Night! to thy sister, Day,
Reach out thy wand,
Thou dost know, thou can'st say
Why I would have you stay
Thus hand in hand!
Thou can'st say, for thou dost know,—
Night, tell to Day
Why thy dim moments flow
Warm'd with a warmer glow
Than sun-lit ray!

214

Oh, Day! whisper unto Night
All thou hast known,
When, 'neath thy sun and shade
Fleeter hours Love has made
E'en than thine own!
Night and Day! whilst you can hold
Joy like to this,
Dear is the black and gold
Of your soft wings, that fold
Me to his kiss.
But, when mingled sun and shade
Bring me no more
Flowers like those that made
All other blossoms fade
Their light before.
Weave then for thy brows of light
A cypress wreath.
Day, that wert once so bright!
Darken to Night, and Night!
Fade into Death!

215

XI.

“And we are man and wife together
Altho' thy breast, once bold
With song, be closed and cold
Beneath flowers' roots and birds' light feet.” [OMITTED]
J. L. Beddoes.

“Se voir le plus possible, et s'aimer seulement,
Sans ruse et sans détours, sans honte ni mensonge,
Sans qu'un désir nous trompe ou qu'un remords nous ronge
Vivre à deux et donner son cœur à tout moment.”
Alfred de Musset.

When Constance rose at morn 'twas not from sleep,
But from a dreary hopeless contemplation
Of the most glorious sunrise. (That same sun
Would rise and set, but never more, maybe,
Cast two fond clinging shadows on the path
That two misguided mortals never more
Might tread together in the coming years!)

216

“Ah, cruel herald of a hapless morn!”
She thought with aching heart, “Of what avail
“For me, yon flaunting gorgeous display
“Of pink and gold and primrose, since your rays
“Are destin'd soon to light me from my love?”
It was as tho' the sympathetic sun
Had guess'd her thought, for as the hour approach'd
When she departed from her flow'ry home,
He shrouded o'er the glory of his face,
And Geoffrey Denzil drove her to the town
Wrapp'd in her cloak, on quite an English day
Of mist and rain. All look'd so different,
And seem'd so doubly gloomy and forlorn
From long association with the sun—
She thought the day assumed a widow'd look
Which harmonized with what her aching heart
Could now no longer hide.
Thus to the strand
They went together. Shelter'd from the rain
She waited there, and watch'd the dreaded boat
Lying against the stone-work of the port,
Its palpitating engine now and then
Hissing and smoking, whilst upon the deck
The bales and baggage of the passengers

217

Lay strewn in wild confusion. Denzil rose
And left her side to help her English maid,
Who, being ignorant of foreign speech,
Was almost helpless;—as he thus explain'd
And cater'd for the comfort of the maid
And her fair mistress, some one touched his arm—
He turn'd, and saw the sunburnt gardener
Belonging to the villa Belvedere,
Who held a written message, ominous
With the dark cover of a telegram—
It was for Constance, but the worthy man
Link'd her with Denzil in his artless mind,
And innocently thought that what was her's
Must surely be of interest to him.
And he was right, for never written words
Sent such a thrill thro' Geoffrey Denzil's heart
As these few lines which flutter'd to the ground
Dropp'd from poor Constance's wan, nerveless hand.
The message was from Roland, and ran thus—
“My father's horse, on Monday afternoon,
“Stumbled and threw him, and he died to-day.”
They did not speak—but thro' each startled brain

218

Rush'd an unutterable flood of thoughts
Conflicting—unexpected, love, remorse,
Astonishment, and the delirious hope
Of an unhoped-for Future! . . . . . .
Now, in truth,
Who would have thought Sir John L'Estrange's cob,
That trusty, confidential, animal,
Would throw his rider, or that being thrown
Poor dear Sir John would never rise again!
But so it was;—with little tufted tail
Uprais'd in air, and quick awak'ning ears,
Over the purple heather, unperceived,
Bounded away, to lay some other snare
The real malefactor; soft and grey,
A little downy rabbit, with no guile,
Or thought of all the changes that ensued
Because he bored his little hermit's hole
Just where Sir John L'Estrange's horse would tread,
Making that pleasant Monday afternoon
Sir John's last Monday in this world of sin,—
So full of snares, to count from rabbit-holes
Upwards, to those worse perils to the soul,
Which good Sir John, who liv'd a worthy life

219

Had ne'er encounter'd in his easy road—
For the jog-trotting of his trusted cob
Was emblematic of the quiet pace
With which he journey'd thro' the peaceful days
Ere Constance went abroad.
So, he was gone
The kind old man with rosy apple cheeks,
And never more his “Ultra-Tory eye”
Will note the signs of danger from afar—
And we must hope that he has gone to dwell
Where all is order'd as he would approve,—
An absolute perpetual monarchy,
Where the Great Autocrat is King of Kings,
And where the subjects know no tyranny
Save the just guidance of a Father's hand.
In two short years from that eventful day,
Beneath the shade of scented orange boughs
And flow'ring myrtles, near a cypress tree
Clung round with roses, Constance sat and mused
In a fair garden. Her's were blissful dreams,
And from her heart a never-ending hymn
Of gratitude and praise rose up to heav'n—

220

Above the feath'ry palms and calm blue sky
Reflected in the glitt'ring tideless sea.
For time had made her Geoffrey Denzil's wife,
And she was once again in Italy—
Nor did this sacred second marriage-ring
Encircling her slight finger, exorcise
(As rings, alas! have oft been known to do!)
Aught of the tenderness she felt before
When it was bitterness and shame to love.
And Denzil, with his independent heart
Scorning the laws and customs of the world,
Learnt it was not alone the guilty zest
With which some natures seek forbidden fruit
That heretofore had made him deem he lov'd.
For now that they were lawful man and wife
The love he felt for her intensified
And deepen'd with the days—the happy days!
And with these days were blended happy nights—
Oh, bless'd experience, but to few vouchsafed!
The treble unity of heart and mind
And all those pulses of material life,
Which throb in harmony to one great end—

221

The sweet, perpetual, intermingling
Of sense and soul,—the mutual interchange
Of all that each can render—each receive!
Oh, for but half a year of such a dream
How willingly would I exchange the rest—
Those future years of loveless solitude
Which Heaven may predestine me to live!
For days which darken into blissful nights
When, heart to heart, in one another's arms
We sink not into blank forgetfulness,
Since e'en in sleep the senses realize
The sacred presence of our best belov'd!
For nights that fade into the happy dawn
When, after this sweet half-unconsciousness,
We wake to know we were not duped by dreams,
But that we hold against our grateful heart
Our dearest treasure! oh, for days and nights
Such as I sometimes dream of, give me grief
And after-pangs of bitter suffering,
But let me glory in the unknown joy
Of some such days and nights before I die!
“Ah,” Denzil said, “How had I pray'd for this,
“But that I never proved an answer'd pray'r!

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“This is the first great undeserved reward
“That God has giv'n me in my restless life
“Of doubt and speculation.”
Constance sigh'd
“Till now I also said indeed the words,
“Praying with hands and lips, but in my heart
“I fear I did not dare anticipate
“Any fulfilment! Then, alas, I know
“I always pray'd for very earthly things—
“That I might be belov'd,—that one might live
“Whom God, in his high wisdom doom'd to die—
“That I may have a daughter or a son—
“Such pigmy wishes, look'd at from High Heav'n!
“'Tis right we should not always have our way—
“And then again, I pray'd another pray'r—
“I pray'd I might resist the pow'r you gain'd
“Over my heart, I felt it more and more
“As days went on; that pray'r seem'd never heard.”
She dropp'd her eyes, and blushing, sigh'd anew,
But he repeated all triumphantly
Her murmur'd words, “That pray'r was never heard!”
“Ah, unregenerate! will you always doubt?

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“And yet,” she added, grasping at a straw,
“You know at any rate, pray'r does no harm—
“If wasted, it is wasted, but the air
“Is all the purer for our purer thought—
“It is no superstition that degrades
“Like some that men have follow'd long ago—
“I feel so grateful when I see the sun
“Shining as now, on such a lovely scene—
“My inward intimate existence yearns
“To give some proof of gratitude to God
“And so to Him I lift my heart in pray'r.”
And thus the days went on, until at last
One of the little pray'rs that Constance pray'd
Was granted to her, and her grateful heart
Began to realize the long'd-for bliss
Of knowing that some soul-begotten ray
Of light and life, intense—intangible—
Meeting with Denzil's warm impatient lips
In those dear days and those mysterious nights,
Had wrought in her that wond'rous miracle,
Ever recurring, yet for ever new,
Incomprehensible and beautiful,—
That inexplicable, sweet, incarnation

224

Of two-fold love, first-felt, a flutt'ring hope
Faint as the plash of muffled elfin oars
In some unfathomable mystic lake,
Or as the fancied murmur of the waves
To one who has been dreaming of the sea.

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Ah, my own love! The years may pass,
The Winter and the Summer days,
The city's fog, the dreamy haze
That hovers o'er the country grass
Hanging betwixt the earth and sky
When black against its pink and gold
At eventide, the trees enroll'd
Stand like some dark conspiracy;
Sable accomplices of Night
In the forced murder she has done,
Helping to hide the dying sun
Dragg'd down from his imperial height
And sinking in his gory bed—
My love! all hours and days may go
And leave no trace, yet in the glow
Of dying suns, and moons that shed
A calmer light; and in the stars
And indefatigable waves,
And in the faint gold streak that laves
The last forsaken ocean bars—
There art thou ever; all in vain
I ask some sign of life from thee
Yet I believe thou liv'st to me
In all I love in life, again,
And somewhere, in land, sky or sea,
I have a hope I cannot kill
That there my loving or my will
May give thee back again to me!

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XII.

“God is folding up the white tent of my youth.” [OMITTED]
“It is too late, too late!
“You may not kiss back my breath to the sunshine.”
Adah I. Menken.

“We know not whether death be good,
But life at least it will not be:
Men will stand saddening as we stood,
Watch the same fields and skies as we
And the same sea.”
Swinburne.

Alas, I would in this uncertain world
All prosper'd where it seem'd that all went well!
I would that never without urgent cause,
Those who are bless'd and loving, wronging none,
Should, as it were, be cheated of their dues
And robb'd by Fate of their hard-earn'd content.
There are some good and worthy on the earth

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But who seem destin'd for some hidden end
To be for ever spokes in ev'ry wheel—
Encumbrances in ev'rybody's path—
The millstones of the world, of sterling stuff
But wearisome to wear around the neck—
That these the great tho' too impatient gods
Should sometimes prematurely set aside
I do not wonder, knowing it is hard
In this vast varying community
To be alike benevolent to all
Or satisfy the cravings of all hearts.
So, when Sir John met such a sudden doom
It almost seem'd as if the Fates had said
“Here is an honest, red-faced kind old man
“Who never has done harm to any one—
“But yet, because of bungling human laws
“He stands for ever, whilst he lives and breathes
“As an insuperable obstacle,
“Marring the moments of that luckless pair
“Whose vast capacity for happiness
“He blights unwittingly.”
And then it seem'd
As if the three relentless beldames plann'd,

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And caused the little guileless downy beast
To burrow near that Sussex highway road.
Now, when this worthy man was sacrificed,
I was ashamed I could not sorrow more,
But, feeling as it were ‘behind the scenes’
I thought “Well, well, since some one must have died
(For Death intrudes in fiction as in fact,)
I almost think he can be spared the best—
So now they will be happy all their lives!
And I may tell of how they liv'd and lov'd,
And how they henceforth kept the decalogue
And died respected at a ripe old age!
But Life is stranger in its chequer'd course
Than aught that ever fancy taught or feign'd—
There are injustices, and ups and downs,
And strange caprices on the part of Fate
Which seem to us most inexplicable
And sad and hopeless!
So, Sir John was dead,
And Constance married to the man she lov'd,
For whom she sinn'd and suffer'd years ago,
And Geoffrey lov'd her, and the fleeting days

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To them were as a blessèd glimpse of heav'n,
And Denzil, who had been a sceptic once,
Felt in his soul the germs of Faith and Love
Upspringing from his earnest gratitude
To that great Pow'r he recognized at last,
And Constance knew that near her heart the flow'r
Of their united love lay folded close
In dreamless slumber, destin'd soon to breathe
The fragrant air that she and Geoffrey breathed
Together, in those fleeting wedded days.
But she had rashly said “Ah, let me live
“Only to know this blessèd hope is true,
“Then come what may,” and her unthinking words
Were register'd by the relentless Fates.—
The day she long'd and pray'd for dawn'd at last,
And Constance kiss'd the cheek of Geoffrey's child,
And he was near her, but no time was given
Him to rejoice in what she deem'd a joy,
For in her struggle with this second life
His little wife pass'd from him into death.
Half stupified he watch'd her lying there
So calm and still, who but some hours ago
Was warm with life;—so sudden it all seem'd,—

231

The words we say at parting left unsaid,
And round about him all the many things
Inanimate, yet seeming now to cry
With eager voices, “No, she is not dead!”
All in a row the little high-heel'd shoes
Those fairy feet would never wear again,—
Upon a chair her hat and parasol,
Whilst the white dress she wore but yesterday
Was flutt'ring in the flower-scented air
From where it hung upon the looking-glass—
The glass that never more would mirror back
That well-known earnest face, for she was dead!
Sooner than here in England, dawn'd that day
Of desolation, when upon the stair
Sounded the grating footsteps of strange men,
The sable-suited myrmidons of Death,
Coming to bear away that silent form
And hide it from the watching of wet eyes.
Geoffrey was sitting in the shrouded room,
Gazing with haggard eyes and bloodless lips
On the sweet face of what was Constance once—
As one entranced, he scarcely realized

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This new and terrible calamity;
But when he heard strange voices in the house,
Guessing their ghastly meaning, from his breast
Escaped a stifled groan of agony,
And all his soul in startled consciousness
Awoke to know the greatest of all griefs
Had fall'n upon him; then he wildly cried—
“Ah, dear and lovely face of her I love!
“Could I but watch it ever sleeping so,
“E'en should those eye-lids never more unclose
“And those sweet lips be silent evermore,
“Yet could I wait and watch thro' all the years
“And keep alive her tender memory.
“Ah, shame to bury such a lovely thing
“All out of sight in earth's unfeeling breast—
“I have a horrid dread that thro' long years
“My memory may fail to call her back!
“Oh, should I e'er forget her!—Let her stay
“And do not hurry her away so soon
“To loneliness and darkness!”
Here the Nun
Sister Theresa, Constance's old friend,
(For they were staying near the sunny town

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Where first they met her) led him from the room
And whisper'd words of Christian hope and faith,
But thro' them all, to his remorseful heart
There ran an under current of reproach—
It seem'd to him as tho' the Sister said
(Whatever form she made the words assume,)
“Ah, surely yonder convent in the hills
“Had been a brighter prison than the one
“To which your boasted love has sent her now.”
I know not whether such a passing thought
E'er flitted thro' her mind, or if his brain,
Perverted by its load of suffering,
Originated ev'ry sentiment
That could inflict self-torture.
“Cease, I pray,”
He said, when next the Sister, meeting him
Strove to console him with her well-meant words,
“In pity cease these vain and empty tales
“About the tender mercies of your God!
“What is this life that He has given me
“Now that the world is empty of her? Where
“May I discover any trace of her?
“Transform'd, or blended into what is fair
“In Nature, may I recognize again

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“Some spark of that pure flame that was her breath?
“Ah, had I but her innocent belief
“Of wingèd meetings in another sphere
“How good t'would be to wait and hope for her!
“Ten thousand years of waiting would I wait,
“Here in this very flesh, ten thousand years,
“To clasp at their eventual expiration
“So dear a blessing!”
Then he sadly thought
“Alas, I did not value her enough
“When she was with me! All my love of her
“Was not enough of love—that sacred thing,
“Her hand, I often only lightly held
“(Not thinking it was lent to lie in mine
“But for a moment!) whilst my fickle mind
“Wander'd away to England. On my breast
“She has lain her head and slept, and I have slept,
“Closing mine eyes to the great happiness
“Of gazing on her, I repair'd to dreams
“In which she sometimes did not follow me—
“She was as lost to me for long whole hours
“As now she is to all eternity!
“Now would I wake, watching her sweetest face
“Thro' sleepless ages, could I feel again

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“The cheek that lightly on my happy heart
“Used once to lean! These are the first sad days
“That I have felt God's anger in my life—
“She was so good, so pure, so beautiful—
“Thinking no evil thought—it was for me
“She left her innocent life of good intent
“To sail with me upon the stormy sea
“Of passion—it was I who dragg'd her down
“To the low level of my selfish life—
“I took her for my own, I mix'd with mine
“Her pure identity;—I spoil'd, devour'd,
“And revell'd in my godless victory—
“And now I am a murderer, like Cain.
“My kiss has kill'd my darling,—all my life
“Is henceforth chasten'd with a deathless hunger
“Insatiable—vain, ah, cursed words
“‘Impossible’ and ‘Never’ and ‘Too late!’”
He look'd towards the cradle, where the babe
With upturn'd face of lily fairness, slept
The sleep of innocence; in vain he strove
To trace some likeness to his buried love
In those impassive features, scarcely yet
Deserving such a name;—the fast closed eyes

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Wanting as yet the mother's silken fringe
Of curling eyelashes on either lid—
The open mouth, a tiny triangle,
He bent to kiss, but tho' he seem'd to breathe
The perfume of the blue starch-hyacinth,
Yet nothing met the longing of his lips
Of her—his wife—the mother of his child!
Then, half in anger with the helpless cause
Of his chang'd life, and wholly in despair,
He cover'd with his hands his haggard face
And knew the bitterest of human griefs.
And so they buried Constance out of sight,
And Geoffrey Denzil never saw again
His darling's face; but he remembers her
As last he saw her; scatter'd all around
Her sleeping form, the scented southern flow'rs,
The single rose, and double violet,
And mignionette, and bright anemone,
And in her hand she held a faded wreath
Of English evergreens—box, laurel, fir,
And one dark spray of sad funereal yew
To which a single shrivell'd berry clung,—
These were the leaves that Constance gather'd once

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Before she quitted silent Denzil Place,
Whereon her husband read her written words—
“This wreath of leaves was gather'd in the garden
“Of Eden; to be kept for evermore.”
And so he laid them there, that, if indeed
That sleeping form should ever rise from death
(As she believ'd,) and soar triumphantly
To other brighter realms, she then should find
On waking into glorious second life,
This little faded memory of earth
Still clinging to her pale unfolding hand,
And like her, maybe, re-awakening
To life and freshness; so that, 'midst the flow'rs
Of Heaven's garden, some soft falling seed,
(Perchance the little shrivell'd yew-berry,)
From these sad sprays of Earth, translated thus,
Might, taking root, uprise and bloom again,
Reminding one amongst the seraph-band
Of those faint, fleeting moments pass'd and gone,
When she had lov'd, and wander'd 'neath the shade
Amongst the haunted groves of Denzil Place.
After six weary years of wandering
The news arrived at Denzil that once more

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Its master would return. No longer poor
In this world's goods, since by the sudden Will
Of his rich relative, his fortune now
Was more than doubled, but how 'reft of all
Those only riches worthy of the name
We need not pause to tell! and with him came
A little fair-hair'd girl call'd Violet—
(So named after the fragrant fav'rite flow'r
Of her dead mother). Something in her eyes
Reminded many of the villagers
Of that sweet face that never more on earth
Would beam upon them.
As they sat in church,
The tall, sad, father, and the little girl,
On the first Sunday after their return,
Both priest and peasant eye'd them curiously,
And Geoffrey Denzil felt an awkward sense
Of mixed defiance and self-consciousness
He had not known before;—he also fear'd
That they might whisper on their way from church
And tittle-tattle o'er his buried past,
Dragging maybe, the name he most ador'd
From the high place from whence he worshipp'd it—
For he had only sought his village church

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Thinking that she would like him to be there,
And from no wish to meet the prying eyes
Of country gossips. Then it seem'd to him
That young Sir Roland, from his curtain'd pew
Beneath the mildew'd hatchments of his race,
Look'd with his large dark eyes askance at him,
And seem'd to say, “So you are home again,
Author of the dishonour of my house!”
But if young Roland's eyes grew somewhat sad
At sight of Denzil and his little girl,
It was but at the memories they 'roused
Of her, his early playmate and his friend
Whom still he lov'd and mourn'd, for to his ears
Had never come those scandalous reports
Whisper'd around, and only Geoffrey's mind
O'er sensitive, could have imagin'd aught
Of enmity or malice in that glance.
(Constance's hatchment never grated there
Against the whitewash'd walls of Farleigh Church,
When summer breezes stirr'd the dingy baize
That hid the open'd door; there is no sign,
No tablet, urn, or monumental stone
Recalling to the minds of those who pray

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Her who once knelt amongst them, and who now
Sleeps under bluer skies.
Far, far away,
There, in the cemetery on the hill
Where Protestants are buried, does she lie—
There is a dearth of grass in Southern lands
But such a wealth of flow'rs! Anemones
As many color'd as the changing wave,
Narcissus, single roses, violets—
And some sweet blossom hanging from a tree
Whose name I know not—golden is its bloom,
And soft as feathers from some magic bird—
These droop around her, fann'd by gentle gales,
And over these, again, a cypress tow'rs,
And in amongst its sombre boding shade
A Banksia rose is climbing towards the sky,
Striving maybe, to reach it by the help
Of that high fun'ral tree, as hopeful hearts
Aspire to Heaven on the wings of Death.)
So, after this first Sunday, it was long
Ere Geoffrey Denzil went to church again,
For there he met so many memories
He fain would bury; but his little girl,

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(To glad', he thought, a hov'ring angel's eyes,)
He taught to worship where her mother knelt
In those old days before he saw her face;
And never more at sacred rite or name
Did his curved lips assume a sceptic's smile,
Since Constance had believ'd that all was true;
And if there was a heaven, she was there,
And she would welcome him, if any deed
Or any suffering of his on Earth
Could wipe away the Past, and give the saints
That greater joy than when those “ninety-nine
Just men” present themselves “Who” (saith the text)
Need no repentance.”
Thus, if strange, 'twas true,
That tho' poor Constance, with her yielding will
Had seem'd to him at first a feeble child
In pow'rs of reasoning and abstruse thought,
Yet she had left upon his sterner mind
(So confident before, in its proud aim
At self-emancipation from all chains
Imposed by man as advocate of heav'n!)
A deeper trace than he had ever dream'd.
Thus, a faint spark, if left at liberty

242

To nestle in the hollow of an oak,
May gently light a beacon in its heart,
Or leave a mark upon the glowing wood—
Whilst up towards heav'n the evanescent flame
Will die in smoke, so soft, and blue, and vague,
It seems beyond belief so faint a thing
Could leave so deep a trace upon the tree!
And this is why the poor at Denzil Place
Are all so well and warmly housed and clad,
And why the old and young, in glowing words,
Sound Denzil's praises, and on Sabbath morns
Will pray that God may bless him, in their pray'rs,
And think of him with reverence and love.
(For this is where the godly often err,—
The sinner sinning against one command
Of God or man, need not in consequence
Prove murderer, or thief, extortioner,
Mover of neighbour's landmarks, seething kids
In mother's milk, or, being by mischance
Found wanting once, prove base in ev'rything.
For human souls I hold no hopeless creed
Of utter degeneration to decay
And degradation, just because the fault,

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“The little rift” maybe “within the lute”
Was not where your's or mine made our's play false!)
So Geoffrey Denzil taught his little girl
The godly saws he did not follow once,
And as he look'd on her he tried to think
That tender bud would bloom into a flow'r
Like the dead flow'r he mourn'd.
It was a grief
To him to think she had not known his love,
That never, never, in the after years
Could he converse of her as one they knew
And wept together! This would make him sad,
And seem'd to chill the love he bore the child,
Whilst with the innocent indifference
Of children for the mother who has borne them,
Who died for them, but whom they have not seen,
And did not know, and cannot therefore mourn,
She often ask'd, “Had she black eyes, or blue,
“Mama?” and many careless questions more
Cutting like knives. “She had brown eyes, my child,”
He answer'd her, “And never your's or mine
“Will look upon such lovely eyes again.”
Thus thro' the years, the father looking back,

244

The little daughter full of child-like hope,—
Strangers in thought, yet by a mutual love
Uniting hearts, together hand in hand,
These two walked on towards the hoped-for Heaven.

245

CONCLUSION.

“And soon again shall music swell the breeze;
Soon, issuing forth, shall glitter thro' the trees
Vestures of nuptial white; and hymns be sung,
And violets scatter'd round; and old and young
In every cottage-porch with garlands green
Stand still to gaze, and gazing, bless the scene;
While her dark eyes declining, by his side
Moves in her virgin-veil the gentle bride.”
Rogers.

The other day, in somewhat pensive mood,
I saunter'd down a dusty Sussex lane
Late in the afternoon; the sun was hot,
And tho' the road was shaded by the oaks
In the off-lying hedgerows near the park,
Yet still I long'd for those intenser shades
I saw afar, between the iron gates
Of Denzil Place, (for I had sought the scene
Of this sad simple story, and could see
The woods of Denzil Place and Farleigh Court,)
But ere I reach'd the tempting tangled shade

246

I heard the clattering of coming steeds,
And round the tufted angle of the lane
A youth and maiden suddenly appear'd
Beaming with life and laughter. As they pass'd
I watch'd them curiously, for both of them
Were beautiful, and something made me feel
A deeper interest than e'er inspired
The sight of any other youth or maid.
The girl was fair, with wealth of golden locks,
And something in the colour of her eyes
Reminded me of eyes I used to know
In years gone by. I turn'd aside to ask
An agèd woman, who, on seeing them,
Had risen from her seat beside her hives
And dropp'd a curtsey; who and what they were
This comely pair?
“She, with the yellow locks,”
Answer'd the dame, endeav'ring while she spoke
To catch a glimpse of their retreating forms,
“Is Violet Denzil, and the gentleman
“Who rode with her, and follows her as shade
“Follows on sunshine, is our master here
“The young Sir Roland; old Sir John L'Estrange

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“Married the mother of Miss Violet
“Before she married Mr. Denzil there
“Over at Denzil Place, (you see the gates,)
“So they are kind of kin-like, and yet still
“Our parson says they are not kin at all,
“Since young Sir Roland is not child of her
“But of Sir John's first lady, and he says
“He hopes that he shall live to join their hands
“As man and wife, and parson also says
“Their marriage-ring will join the properties,
“And put to shame some scandal-mong'ring tales
“Folks whisper'd here.”
With this she turn'd away
And fearless of the buzzing colony
That swarm'd about the ruffles of her cap,
Began to celebrate some mystic rite
Connected with her bees, whilst on I stroll'd,
Following the prints which those two horses' hoofs
Left in the dusty road, and lost in thought.
So this fair being with the golden hair
Was Violet Denzil, born in Italy,
The child of Love and Beauty! and the youth
Was that brave handsome boy who used to romp

248

And ramble with his lovely stepmother
Thro' fields and woodlands in the years gone by;
And they would marry, (so the parson thought,
And who should be so good a judge as he,
Who doubtless had wise reasons for such thought?)
Ah, here, if marriage of the young and fair,—
If blooming cheeks and lovely sunny head,
Wedding with brave brown eyes and stalwart frame
And manly heart, e'er promised happiness,
Then should these two, who like some glowing dream
Of Prince and Princess in a fairy-tale,
So gaily gallopp'd past me, on the road
To Life and Love; then should these two be bless'd
With ev'ry earthly good;—around their knees
May happy children laugh and sport in glee,
And children's children, in the after years—
Good little Geoffreys and fair Constances,
Who must not sin like naughty grandpapa,
Or pretty grandmama, who died so young,
And whose sweet picture, in a muslin dress
“With coral-color'd sash and shady hat,
And looking like an angel,” they will see
Hanging within the walls of Denzil Place.

249

EPILOGUE.

I lay aside my pen,—my story ends,
“Of some few years in some few English lives;”
Warning of evils wrought by bosom friends
To some few English husbands and their wives,—
A simple story—unimprov'd by rhymes,
And unembellish'd with that mystic glow
Which hovers o'er the tales of olden times,
The chivalresque romaunts of long ago.
Yet I would say, to compensate for this,
(Had but my Constance lov'd the man she ought,
And had my Geoffrey's been a lawful kiss,)
That I had felt and understood each thought
Portray'd in them; and that they liv'd and mov'd
And had their being outside the gilded rim
Of this poor book, and that they sinn'd and lov'd,
And that in truth I knew both her and him.—
Or wholly in the flesh, or as, may be,
A sculptor recognises, blent in one
From many models borrow'd, arm or knee
Or rounded throat or bosom;—and the sun
Has shone in very truth on ev'ry scene
My humble pen has striven to portray,
And Denzil Place and Farleigh Court have been
With all their inmates, and I know the day

250

When Constance first saw Geoffrey Denzil ride
Thro' long arcades of evergreens, and when
She knelt in love and anguish by his side
And told him all her aching heart knew then.
Not by these names were known this erring pair,
(Nor yet that injured husband, kind and old)—
But he was human, she alas, was fair—
And ‘good Sir Johns’ are always manifold.
You search in vain for moral or advice—
For flow'ry language,—complicated plot,—
Or cunning metaphor, or neat and nice
And pointed epigram,—you find them not
I tremble for my reader's kind good will,
And hang a bashful head, yet seem to see
(No doubt with partial eyes,) a moral still
Which lingers here, if only seen by me.
Poor Constance was not born so bad and base
As needs must seem a guilty faithless wife,
And had her heart been harder, or her face
Less fair, she might have liv'd a blameless life.
She was the eager champion of the poor,
And Denzil was her helper in the cause,
High were their motives, and their conduct pure,
And if his soul despised our human laws
It was because they seem'd less just and true
Than those that he had fashion'd as his own,—
He would have form'd a new religion, too,
E'en better,—broader,—than this present one.
He did not forge, as weapon to obtain
His evil purpose, any cunning scheme
Such as some men have form'd, who wish'd to gain
The love of other women,—for his dream
Had been to veil his idol in the shrine
His love and reverence had rais'd on high,

251

And worship her as tho' a thing divine
Almost too sacred for the human eye
To light upon;—whilst she had seen with grief
In him the signs of a persistent will
To war against all orthodox belief,
Yet hoped, with patience, to convert him still,
So sought his side, nor ever miss'd the chance
Of tender word of counsel, wise and strong
Beyond her years, or sweet reproachful glance
At any word or action seeming wrong.
No naughty novels did my Geoffrey lend,—
No Ernest Feydeaus, and no Paul de Kocks,
He was the “working man of England's friend”
And talk'd of Progress whilst she knitted socks,
'Twas thus they fell . . . . . ! E'en as they sagely plann'd
The reformation of the human kind,
They saw their boasted bulwarks blown as sand
At the remorseless mercy of the wind!
“Captain or Colonel, Knight, or man-at-arms”
So may you fall, whilst gazing at the sky,
Blind to the many dangers and alarms
Which close beside you in your pathway lie!
And you, fair lady, who could never err
Save from your beauty, or your ‘melting mood’
Which dreads all cruelty,—be warn'd by her
And be a little cruel to be good!
She did not fall from love of deadly sin,
Nor did her breast for guilty pleasures glow,
And pure had been the heart that beat within,
Save for her fatal fear of saying “no.”
But ah, forgive her! in the coming years
She cannot cross your path, or cause your cheek
To blush for her delinquencies,—her tears
Are dried for ever, and her voice will speak

252

To Geoffrey Denzil not one loving word
Of all the many he remembers yet,
Nor is her fairy footfall ever heard
Now or for ever;—so forgive, forget
Her many faults and failings, she is dead,
And many miss her, and would fain recall
Her and her frailties, and would e'en, instead,
Exaggerate her virtues:—faults and all
Some foolish people lov'd her. She is gone
Like this sad autumn day, of which the hue
Suits well this landscape;—all the sculptured stone
Of these two Denzil dragons, wet with dew
Is glist'ning from a newly risen moon
Charming the hazy distance 'neath her reign
Of silv'ry sad enchantment. Very soon
Thro' ev'ry quaint Elizabethan pane
Glimmers a twinkling light. Farewell old home!
Old house with windows looking like the eyes
Of some old friend, who smiles at those who come
And sighs for those who go;—but mostly sighs
For her who never more will come or go,
And never more may look upon thy face!
Farewell sad witness of her shame and woe,
Farewell to Constance and to Denzil Place.