I
To-night he sees their star burn, dewy-bright,
Deep in the pansy, eve hath made for it,
Low in the west; a placid purple lit
At its far edge with warm auroral light:
Love’s planet hangs above a cedared
height;
And there in shadow, like gold music writ
Of dusk’s dark fingers, scale-like
fire-flies flit
Now up, now down the balmy bars of night.
How different from that eve a year ago!
Which was a stormy flower in the hair
Of dolorous day, whose sombre eyes looked,
blurred,
Into night’s sibyl face, and saw
the woe
Of parting near, and imaged a despair,
As now a hope caught from a homing word.
II
She came unto him-as the springtime
does
Unto the land where all lies dead and
cold,
Until her rosary of days is told
And beauty, prayer-like, blossoms where death was.-
Nature divined her coming-yea,
the dusk
Seemed thinking of that happiness:
behold,
No cloud it had to blot its marigold
Moon, great and golden, o’er the
slopes of musk;
Whereon earth’s voice made music;
leaf and stream
Lilting the same low lullaby again,
To coax the wind, who romped among the
hills
All day, a tired child, to sleep and dream:
When through the moonlight of the locust-lane
She came, as spring comes through her
daffodils.
III
White as a lily molded of Earth’s
milk
That eve the moon swam in a hyacinth sky;
Soft in the gleaming glens the wind went
by,
Faint as a phantom clothed in unseen silk:
Bright as a naiad’s leap, from shine
to shade,
The runnel twinkled through the shaken
brier;
Above the hills one long cloud, pulsed
with fire,
Flashed like a great, enchantment-welded
blade.
And when the western sky seemed some weird
land,
And night a witching spell at whose command
One sloping star fell green from heav’n;
and deep
The warm rose opened for the moth to sleep;
Then she, consenting, laid her hands in
his,
And lifted up her lips for their first
kiss.
IV
There where they part, the porch’s
step is strewn
With wind-tossed petals of the purple
vine;
Athwart the porch the shadow of a pine
Cleaves the white moonlight; and, like
some calm rune
Heaven says to Earth, shines the majestic
moon;
And now a meteor draws a lilac line
Across the welkin, as if God would sign
The perfect poem of this night of June.
The wood-wind stirs the flowering chestnut-tree,
Whose curving blossoms strew the glimmering
grass
Like crescents that wind-wrinkled waters
glass;
And, like a moonstone in a frill of flame,
The dew-drop trembles on the peony,
As in a lover’s heart his sweetheart’s
name.
V
In after years shall she stand here again,
In heart regretful? and with lonely sighs
Think on that night of love, and realize
Whose was the fault whence grew the parting
pain?
And, in her soul, persuading still in
vain,
Shall doubt take shape, and all its old
surmise
Bid darker phantoms of remorse arise
Trailing the raiment of a dead disdain?
Masks, unto whom shall her avowal yearn,
With looks clairvoyant seeing how each
is
A different form, with eyes and lips that
burn
Into her heart with loves last look and kiss?-
And, ere they pass, shall she behold them
turn
To her a face which evermore is his?
VI
In after years shall he remember how
Dawn had no breeze soft as her murmured
name?
And day no sunlight that availed the same
As her bright smile to cheer the world
below?
Nor had the conscious twilight’s
golds and grays
Her souls allurement, that was free of blame,-
Nor dusk’s gold canvas, where one
star’s white flame
Shone, more bewitchment than her own sweet ways.-
Then as the night with moonlight and perfume,
And dew and darkness, qualifies the whole
Dim world with glamour, shall the past with dreams-
That were the love-theme of their lives-illume
The present with remembered hours, whose
gleams,
Unknown to him, shall face them soul to
soul?
VII
No! not for her and him that part; –the
Might-
Have-Been’s sad consolation;-where
had bent,
Haply, in prayer and patience penitent,
Both, though apart, before no blown-out
light.
The otherwise of fate for them, when white
The lilacs bloom again, and, innocent,
Spring comes with beauty for her testament,
Singing the praises of the day and night.
When orchards blossom and the distant
hill
Is vague with haw-trees as a ridge with
mist,
The moon shall see him where a watch he
keeps
By her young form that lieth white and
still,
With lidded eyes and passive wrist on
wrist,
While by her side he bows himself and
weeps.
VIII
And, oh, what pain to see the blooms appear
Of haw and dogwood in the spring again;
The primrose leaning with the dragging
rain,
And hill-locked orchards swarming far
and near.
To see the old fields, that her steps
made dear,
Grow green with deepening plenty of the
grain,
Yet feel how this excess of life is vain,-
How vain to him!-since she
no more is here.
What though the woodland burgeon, water
flow,
Like a rejoicing harp, beneath the boughs!
The cat-bird and the hermit-thrush arouse
Day with the impulsive music of their
love!
Beneath the graveyard sod she will not
know,
Nor what his heart is all too conscious
of!
IX
How blessed is he who, gazing in the tomb,
Can yet behold, beneath th’ investing
mask
Of mockery,-whose horror seems
to ask
Sphinx-riddles of the soul within the gloom,-
Upon dead lips no dust of Love’s
dead bloom;
And in dead hands no shards of Faith’s
rent flask;
But Hope, who still stands at her starry
task,
Weaving the web of comfort on her loom!
Thrice blessed! who, ’though he
hear the tomb proclaim,
How all is Death’s and Life Death’s
other name;
Can yet reply: “O Grave, these
things are yours!
But that is left which life indeed assures-
Love, through whose touch I shall arise
the same!
Love, of whose self was wrought the universe!”