One other round of hours remained to us
Yet, ere the confluence of our lives and thoughts Should separate and grow distinct again;
When on an afternoon we sallied out
Among the browning fields, adown dim lanes, Beneath the ragged shade of chastened trees, To view the scenery, and drink into Our hearts the Nature-spirit felt o'er all: For we were kindred in our Nature-love. It was a calm; the winds were bridled up. A film of mistiness, indefinite,
Paled the wide azure of the strandless heavens. The sun, enthroned amid a cloudless sphere, Trailed o'er the western heights his regal robe. A valley lay before us, prone and mute, Too happy in the luxury of peace For voice or breath, or music's gayer charm: A valley fair, with outlets 'mongst the hills, Sun-touched, and flushel with amber radiance, Caught from the flood of yellow, glamouring The blenching sycamores, and tempered with The wild black lustreing of Bradshaw Edge. Beyond, a solemn wave of shaggy heights, Crowned with the tuft of Roches, glimmered red. We talked of all the wonder of the world; Bewailed the narrowness of human ken; Pictured the might-be from the known-to-be ; Pushed off Conjecture's shallop on the surge- The vast, dumb, unrevealed that round us lies! Clomb from the inanimate far up the scale To the divine; and felt a lifting up
I spoke of all the undertones
Of sad humanity; the current-beats
That underlie the surface, bland and calm.
I said, "No home arises 'mid these vales, No hearth gleams brightly; but around it grow Romances strange, that interweave and mix Like circles on a pond beneath the rain, And yet are separate, and spread distinct, And die away, as they had never been : In these is much of joy, and much of good, An under-shade of wrong, and sin, and blame, And much of voiceless sorrow nobly borne."
“Ah, painful is the school of discipline!" She answered with a sudden change of tone; "Yet sorrow is a tutor wonderful!
Our life is like a tiny shallow stream,
Until the storm-rack wear it deeper, wider. We know not life, nor aught of human nature Until the probe has pierced our heart of hearts, And then we come to know what living means: Our view is circumscribed, until the winds Roll off the morning mists that hide the heavens : Ah, sorrow is a blessing in disguise !"
I stared into the chaste, unfurrowed face In utter wonderment; and silently We sauntered back into the house again. But when the light lay swimming, mantling on The margins of the hills, and o'er the pond The swallow glided with a homeward wing; When all the air was quivering with the chant Of vesper bells; and the wild melody
Was dying out serenely towards the west; We sat beside the window.
One of Buchanan's thrilling melodies; And while its flood of lofty tenderness, Its soul of pitying, sorrowing sympathy, Its plaintive cry of human pathos, knit Our spirits in a strange affinity,
I said, "You spoke of sorrow; you, so fresh, And erst so buoyant; from whose life, I dreamed, No shadow-hand, as yet, had snatched the charm, The fond illusive phantasy of youth,
That fades too soon! Dare you not trust me then? Won't you believe me true, and open up
That hidden chamber of your heart to me?" She paused a moment, and the hot pink blood Ran up her temples, dyed her cheeks and neck, Then answered meekly, looking down the while : 66 Three years gone by, a cousin came to us. His health was shaken by the years of stern, Unflinching study he had passed; and he Had fled the city world, to search among Our Hebe-haunted hills for vigour new. He was a noble, manly youth; had all The attributes of woman's hero-dreams. His lofty intellect unveiled for me
The world whose name was wonder, and the sky That domed the flight of mind; a realm, to me, Of utter glory, dreamed of—never seen.
We were together much; were friends at first : And, last, were more.
Ah! I was very young;
I should not be, I think, so foolish now.
Well, it is past and gone!
To mix again with college life and scenes. As time went on, I knew and felt the change. I never blamed him once; 'twas all my fault,
I owned it in my deepest bitterness !
He was ambitious; full of lofty aims;
I, but a simple girl; I should have known 'The eagle mates not with the dove.'
Came off with honours manifold; is now
A clergyman. He writes to me, and we
Are friends are friends," she echoed; paused and dropped Her hands, that trembled o'er the embroidery,
Until the needle-point had pierced the skin,
Upon her lap. Her face sank lower and lower,
And such a storm of agonizing sobs
Burst from the heavings of the o'ercharged breast As I had never witnessed; have not since, Through all the bitter scenes my eyes have met. "Ah!" thought I, "never bosom shrined a heart More true and tender."
My two warm hands on hers, and held them there Till she had grown more calm; then, bending, said, "I, too, have suffered much; I feel for you."
She raised her head, and for a moment each Looked through the sense of seeing to the heart. She went her way, back to the old, brown hills.
The days went on; but, often as we met, There was a something in the clasp of hands, A quiver in the cadence of the voice,
A language in the motion of the lip The world could not discern; a tacit bond Our souls could feel, but never comprehend; A deeper looking through the upper show Into the heart.
We knew not how or why,
But we were kin for ever after that.
MAIDEN in the first warm, tender flush
Of holy womanhood; a sprightly thing,
With gaily fashioned robes of choicest hues,
Rich artificial buds, long ribbon-ends,
And loops of beads a-tremble in the wind;
Warm, honey-eyed, and fresh, and country-faced; Plump, luscious cherry-lips, apart; a chin A-sly with dimples, touching lightly now, Now dropping lovingly upon a brooch
That clasps the shawl around her spotless throat, Where smiles always a shy, but sturdy swain. A careless thing, with quick and jaunty step, A tiny reticule looped on an arm, and in One dimpled rosebud hand a parasol.
A thin and battered woman, who has braved The frosts and blasts of many winter-times,
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