University of Virginia Library

LOVESCENE.

1

She stood beside me, in the Shade,
The starry Shade of Heavensblue,
Whose Lamps, like nuptial Torches, made
By Love eterne, their soft Light threw.

2

She stood beside me, and my Youth
With all its Dreams of Harmony
Seemed in her Form to grow to Truth,
And pass in living Beauty by.

3

As erst thro' my own Heart they passed,
Stirring it like Firstlove's long kiss,
So on my Sense they shone at last,
And turned my Dreams to waking Bliss.

4

She stood beside me like a Flower
Bowed neath the dewy Eveningair,

61

In modest Fear, yet conscious Power,
I thought she never looked so fair.

5

I took her Hand, it trembled so,
And yet no Thought of Wrong was there,
It trembled in its own deep Joy,
As trembles Love alone and Prayer!

6

I gazed upon her pure, bright Face,
Thro' which the Peace of Heaven shone,
And Earth seemed as a holy Place,
Which Angels themselves might dwell on.

7

I could not speak—mine Eyes where dim,
And like a Child, I knew not why,
I wept: for when Joy's Cup is brim,
The Heart must waste some Drops or die.

8

Waste, do I say! it is not so,
Love is no Miser of the Heart:
To him there is no future Woe,
He has no Self, no meaner Part.

9

Yet were it well that Passion's Breath
Ne'er flared to Waste his holy Flame,
That burning calmly on 'till Death,
It lit us to an higher Aim.

10

An higher Aim! and can there be
An higher Aim than thus to love,
Nought in the World to feel or see
Save our own Bliss and Him above?

11

Of all Thanksgivings that are known,
What for the God of Love so fit,
As thus to be but Love alone,
With his own Self made one by it!

12

Aye, Wisdom comes with Afteryears,
The Wisdom of the niggard Brain,
But the Heart too a Wisdom bears,
An Alchymy ne'er found again.

13

Love becomes Calculation, grows
A Miser—not poured from the Heart,

62

Like to the Perfume of the Rose,
No more our Being, but a Part.

14

When I look back on that sweet Hour
Of Love and holy Tenderness,
I feel that all Man's idle Lore
Not like the Heart's least Beat can bless.

15

I see again the wellknown Spot,
I hear her light Step on the Ground,
Long Years have flown since then, yet what
Are they? the Echo of a Sound.

16

Methinks I see her as she stood,
Wrapped in a Veil of Beauty by
The calm Moonlight, which with a Flood
Of Glory clothed her to my Eye.

17

She looked an Emanation of
That holy Light, and her white Vest,
Like a Dovesplumage, seemed to move
Above her gentlyheaving Breast:

18

Soft as a Star her blue Eye shone,
Yet turned in Bashfulness away,
As if she feared to trust upon
My prying Glance its telltale Ray.

19

Yet to her Hand a gentle Thrill
Th' involuntary Heart conveyed,
For' mid his Artifice Love will
Forget his Part, the first Time played.

20

Timid her Hand she half drew back,
And blushed as tho' 't had been broadday,
But true Love is not wont to rack
Or fling the Heart it seeks away.

21

She turned in Virginmajesty,
In simple Dignity of Mien,
Nature alone shone in her Eye,
In Gest or Look no Art was seen.

22

Meaning no Wrong, and fearing none,
She rayed me with a Smile of Light,

63

Like those which round a Child's Brows run,
When Nature prompts unfeigned Delight.

23

Some Underwords she murmured low,
Like a still Summerbrook at Eve,
Their Sense!—I had no Ear to know:
But Love with them a Spell did weave.

24

Modest, but frank and free, she came,
Like Eve, and sought my throbbing Breast,
And there her Image, aye the same,
Lives by that first Embrace imprest.

25

Thus was she wooed, and won, and wed,
And Blessings to such Love are sent,
A Centralfire, it burns selffed,
And brightens on 'till Life be spent.

26

Not the Volcano's fitful Flames,
That waste within and scorch around
In their first Burst, and when Time tames,
Leave for Joy's Seeds fireploughëd Grround.

27

But holy Warmth as of a Sun,
Moulding a little World of Joys,
Flowers and Plants, whereof not one
Bears hidden Thorns, or Fruit that cloys.

28

Blessings be on thee, holy Love!
With thee it is indeed to live:
For Love is Life! by thee we prove
How most we have, when most we give.

29

'Tis Love who earns the Gifts of Faith,
'Tis he who still works Miracles,
And in his Might the Spirit hath
A Tongue that utters Oracles.

30

He sces the sunny Side alone,
And in the Autumnleaf he views
No Emblem of Decay, but one
Of Beauty in its brightening Hues!

31

He shrinks not back from Grief or Pain,
He has no Eyes or Ears for Doubt,

64

Thus in each Loss he finds a Gain,
From each Fall rises up more stout.

32

His wiser Mind can mould its State
Unto the Shows of better Things,
From earthly Chrysalis create,
The perfect Form, the Angelswings!

33

Blessed, then blessed be his Name,
And thine, my Love, my Spirit's Guide,
Who taught his Worth, and still the same,
Tho' long a Wife, art yet a Bride!