Puslapio vaizdai
PDF
„ePub“

A DEAD LETTER.

"A cœur blessé - l'ombre et le silence."

H. DE BALzac.

I

I.

DREW it from its china tomb; –

It came out feebly scented

With some thin ghost of past perfume
That dust and days had lent it.

An old, old letter, folded still!

To read with due composure, I sought the sun-lit window-sill, Above the gray enclosure,

That glimmering in the sultry haze,
Faint-flowered, dimly shaded,

Slumbered like Goldsmith's Madam Blaize,
Bedizened and brocaded.

A queer old place! You'd surely say
Some tea-board garden-maker
Had planned it in Dutch William's day
To please some florist Quaker,

So trim it was. The yew-trees still,
With pious care perverted,

Grew in the same grim shapes; and still
The lipless dolphin spurted;

Still in his wonted state abode
The broken-nosed Apollo;
And still the cypress-arbour showed
The same umbrageous hollow.

Only, as fresh young Beauty gleams

[ocr errors]

From coffee-coloured laces,

So peeped from its old-fashioned dreams The fresher modern traces;

For idle mallet, hoop, and ball
Upon the lawn were lying;

A magazine, a tumbled shawl,

Round which the swifts were flying;

And, tossed beside the Guelder rose,
A heap of rainbow knitting,
Where, blinking in her pleased repose,
A Persian cat was sitting.

"A place to love in, live, for aye,

[ocr errors]

If we too, like Tithonus,

[ocr errors]

Could find some God to stretch the gray,
Scant life the Fates have thrown us;

"But now by steam we run our race,
With buttoned heart and pocket;
Our Love's a gilded, surplus grace, -
Just like an empty locket!

"The time is out of joint.' Who will,
May strive to make it better;
For me, this warm old window-sill,
And this old dusty letter."

II.

"Dear John (the letter ran), it can't, can't be, For Father's gone to Chorley Fair with Sam, And Mother's storing Apples, - Prue and Me Up to our Elbows making Damson Jam : But we shall meet before a Week is gone, 'Tis a long Lane that has no Turning,' John!

"Only till Sunday next, and then you'll wait
Behind the White-Thorn, by the broken Stile-
We can go round and catch them at the Gate,
All to Ourselves, for nearly one long Mile;
Dear Prue won't look, and Father he 'll go on,
And Sam's two Eyes are all for Cissy, John!

"John, she's so smart, with every Ribbon new,

Flame-coloured Sack, and Crimson Padesoy: As proud as proud; and has the Vapours too, Just like My Lady; calls poor Sam a Boy, And vows no Sweet-heart's worth the Thinking-on Till he's past Thirty. . . I know better, John!

"My Dear, I don't think that I thought of much Before we knew each other, I and you; And now, why, John, your least, least Fingertouch,

Gives me enough to think a Summer through. See, for I send you Something! There, 'tis gone! Look in this corner, - mind you find it, John!"

III.

This was the matter of the note,

A long-forgot deposit,

Dropped in an Indian dragon's throat,
Deep in a fragrant closet,

« AnkstesnisTęsti »