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THE MOVERS.
SKETCH

 
Parting was over at last, and all the good-bys had been spoken.
Up the long hillside road the white-tented wagon moved slowly,
Bearing the mother and children, while onward before them the father
Trudged with his gun on his arm, and the faithful house-dog beside him,
Grave and sedate, as if knowing the sorrowful thoughts of his master.
 
 
April was in her prime, and the day in its dewy awaking:
Like a great flower, afar on the crest of the eastern woodland,
Goldenly bloomed the sun, and over the beautiful valley,
Dim with its dew and shadow, and bright with its dream of a river,
Looked to the western hills, and shone on the humble procession,
Paining with splendor the children’s eyes, and the heart of the mother.
 
 
Beauty, and fragrance, and song filled the air like a palpable presence.
Sweet was the smell of the dewy leaves and the flowers in the wild-wood,
Fair the long reaches of sun and shade in the aisles of the forest.
Glad of the spring, and of love, and of morning, the wild birds were singing:
Jays to each other called harshly, then mellowly fluted together;
Sang the oriole songs as golden and gay as his plumage;
Pensively piped the querulous quails their greetings unfrequent,
While, on the meadow elm, the meadow lark gushed forth in music,
Rapt, exultant, and shaken with the great joy of his singing;
Over the river, loud-chattering, aloft in the air, the kingfisher
Hung, ere he dropped, like a bolt, in the water beneath him;
Gossiping, out of the bank flew myriad twittering swallows;
And in the boughs of the sycamores quarrelled and clamored the blackbirds.
 
 
Never for these things a moment halted the Movers, but onward,
Up the long hillside road the white-tented wagon moved slowly.
Till, on the summit, that overlooked all the beautiful valley,
Trembling and spent, the horses came to a standstill unbidden;
Then from the wagon the mother in silence got down with her children,
Came, and stood by the father, and rested her hand on his shoulder.
 
 
Long together they gazed on the beautiful valley before them;
Looked on the well-known fields that stretched away to the woodlands,
Where, in the dark lines of green, showed the milk-white crest of the dogwood,
Snow of wild-plums in bloom, and crimson tints of the red-bud;
Looked on the pasture-fields where the cattle were lazily grazing,–
Soft, and sweet, and thin came the faint, far notes of the cow-bells,–
Looked on the oft-trodden lanes, with their elder and blackberry borders,
Looked on the orchard, a bloomy sea, with its billows of blossoms.
Fair was the scene, yet suddenly strange and all unfamiliar,
As are the faces of friends, when the word of farewell has been spoken.
Long together they gazed; then at last on the little log-cabin–
Home for so many years, now home no longer forever–
Rested their tearless eyes in the silent rapture of anguish.
Up on the morning air no column of smoke from the chimney
Wavering, silver and azure, rose, fading and brightening ever;
Shut was the door where yesterday morning the children were playing;
Lit with a gleam of the sun the window stared up at them blindly.
Cold was the hearthstone now, and the place was forsaken and empty.
Empty? Ah no! but haunted by thronging and tenderest fancies,
Sad recollections of all that had been, of sorrow or gladness.
 
 
Still they sat there in the glow of the wide red fire in the winter,
Still they sat there by the door in the cool of the still summer evening,
Still the mother seemed to be singing her babe there to slumber,
Still the father beheld her weep o’er the child that was dying,
Still the place was haunted by all the Past’s sorrow and gladness!
 
 
Neither of them might speak for the thoughts that came crowding their hearts so,
Till, in their ignorant trouble aloud the children lamented;
Then was the spell of silence dissolved, and the father and mother
Burst into tears and embraced, and turned their dim eyes to the Westward.
 
Ohio, 1859.

THROUGH THE MEADOW

 
The summer sun was soft and bland,
As they went through the meadow land.
 
 
The little wind that hardly shook
The silver of the sleeping brook
Blew the gold hair about her eyes,–
A mystery of mysteries!
So he must often pause, and stoop,
And all the wanton ringlets loop
Behind her dainty ear–emprise
Of slow event and many sighs.
 
 
Across the stream was scarce a step,–
And yet she feared to try the leap;
And he, to still her sweet alarm,
Must lift her over on his arm.
 
 
She could not keep the narrow way,
For still the little feet would stray,
And ever must he bend t’ undo
The tangled grasses from her shoe,–
From dainty rosebud lips in pout,
Must kiss the perfect flowér out!
 
 
Ah! little coquette! Fair deceit!
Some things are bitter that were sweet.
 

GONE

 
Is it the shrewd October wind
Brings the tears into her eyes?
Does it blow so strong that she must fetch
Her breath in sudden sighs?
 
 
The sound of his horse’s feet grows faint,
The Rider has passed from sight;
The day dies out of the crimson west,
And coldly falls the night.
 
 
She presses her tremulous fingers tight
Against her closéd eyes,
And on the lonesome threshold there,
She cowers down and cries.
 

THE SARCASTIC FAIR

 
Her mouth is a honey-blossom,
No doubt, as the poet sings;
But within her lips, the petals,
Lurks a cruel bee, that stings.
 

RAPTURE

 
In my rhyme I fable anguish,
Feigning that my love is dead,
Playing at a game of sadness,
Singing hope forever fled,–
 
 
Trailing the slow robes of mourning,
Grieving with the player’s art,
With the languid palms of sorrow
Folded on a dancing heart.
 
 
I must mix my love with death-dust,
Lest the draught should make me mad;
I must make believe at sorrow,
Lest I perish, over-glad.
 

DEAD

I
 
Something lies in the room
Over against my own;
The windows are lit with a ghastly bloom
Of candles, burning alone,–
Untrimmed, and all aflare
In the ghastly silence there!
 
II
 
People go by the door,
Tiptoe, holding their breath,
And hush the talk that they held before,
Lest they should waken Death,
That is awake all night
There in the candlelight!
 
III
 
The cat upon the stairs
Watches with flamy eye
For the sleepy one who shall unawares
Let her go stealing by.
She softly, softly purrs,
And claws at the banisters.
 
IV
 
The bird from out its dream
Breaks with a sudden song,
That stabs the sense like a sudden scream;
The hound the whole night long
Howls to the moonless sky,
So far, and starry, and high.
 

THE DOUBT

 
She sits beside the low window,
In the pleasant evening-time,
With her face turned to the sunset,
Reading a book of rhyme.
 
 
And the wine-light of the sunset,
Stolen into the dainty nook,
Where she sits in her sacred beauty,
Lies crimson on the book.
 
 
O beautiful eyes so tender,
Brown eyes so tender and dear,
Did you leave your reading a moment
Just now, as I passed near?
 
 
Maybe, ’tis the sunset flushes
Her features, so lily-pale;
Maybe, ’tis the lover’s passion,
She reads of in the tale.
 
 
O darling, and darling, and darling,
If I dared to trust my thought;
If I dared to believe what I must not,
Believe what no one ought,–
 
 
We would read together the poem
Of the Love that never died,
The passionate, world-old story
Come true, and glorified.
 

THE THORN

 
“Every Rose, you sang, has its Thorn,
But this has none, I know.”
She clasped my rival’s Rose
Over her breast of snow.
 
 
I bowed to hide my pain,
With a man’s unskilful art;
I moved my lips, and could not say
The Thorn was in my heart!
 

THE MYSTERIES

 
Once on my mother’s breast, a child, I crept,
Holding my breath;
There, safe and sad, lay shuddering, and wept
At the dark mystery of Death.
 
 
Weary and weak, and worn with all unrest,
Spent with the strife,–
O mother, let me weep upon thy breast
At the sad mystery of Life!
 

THE BATTLE IN THE CLOUDS

“The day had been one of dense mists and rains, and much of General Hooker’s battle was fought above the clouds, on the top of Lookout Mountain.”–

 
General Meig’s Report of the Battle before Chattanooga.

 
Where the dews and the rains of heaven have their fountain,
Like its thunder and its lightning our brave burst on the foe,
Up above the clouds on Freedom’s Lookout Mountain
Raining life-blood like water on the valleys down below.
O, green be the laurels that grow,
O sweet be the wild-buds that blow,
In the dells of the mountain where the brave are lying low.
 
 
Light of our hope and crown of our story,
Bright as sunlight, pure as starlight shall their deeds of daring glow,
While the day and the night out of heaven shed their glory,
On Freedom’s Lookout Mountain whence they routed Freedom’s foe.
O, soft be the gales when they go
Through the pines on the summit where they blow,
Chanting solemn music for the souls that passed below.
 

FOR ONE OF THE KILLED

 
There on the field of battle
Lies the young warrior dead:
Who shall speak in the soldier’s honor?
How shall his praise be said?
 
 
Cannon, there in the battle,
Thundered the soldier’s praise,
Hark! how the volumed volleys echo
Down through the far-off days!
 
 
Tears for the grief of a father,
For a mother’s anguish, tears;
But for him that died in his country’s battle,
Glory and endless years.
 

THE TWO WIVES.
(TO COLONEL J. G. M., IN MEMORY OF THE EVENT BEFORE ATLANTA.)

I
 
The colonel rode by his picket-line
In the pleasant morning sun,
That glanced from him far off to shine
On the crouching rebel picket’s gun.
 
II
 
From his command the captain strode
Out with a grave salute,
And talked with the colonel as he rode;–
The picket levelled his piece to shoot.
 
III
 
The colonel rode and the captain walked,–
The arm of the picket tired;
Their faces almost touched as they talked,
And, swerved from his aim, the picket fired.
 
IV
 
The captain fell at the horse’s feet,
Wounded and hurt to death,
Calling upon a name that was sweet
As God is good, with his dying breath.
 
V
 
And the colonel that leaped from his horse and knelt
To close the eyes so dim,
A high remorse for God’s mercy felt,
Knowing the shot was meant for him.
 
VI
 
And he whispered, prayer-like, under his breath,
The name of his own young wife:
For Love, that had made his friend’s peace with Death,
Alone could make his with life.
 

BEREAVED

 
The passionate humming-birds cling
To the honeysuckles’ hearts;
In and out at the open window
The twittering house-wren darts,
And the sun is bright.
 
 
June is young, and warm, and sweet;
The morning is gay and new;
Glimmers yet the grass of the door-yard,
Pearl-gray with fragrant dew,
And the sun is bright.
 
 
From the mill, upon the stream,
A busy murmur swells;
On to the pasture go the cattle,
Lowing, with tinkling bells,
And the sun is bright.
 
 
She gathers his playthings up,
And dreamily puts them by;
Children are playing in the meadow,
She hears their joyous cry,
And the sun is bright.
 
 
She sits and clasps her brow,
And looks with swollen eyes
On the landscape that reels and dances,–
To herself she softly cries,
And the sun is bright.
 

THE SNOW-BIRDS

 
The lonesome graveyard lieth,
A deep with silent waves
Of night-long snow, all white, and billowed
Over the hidden graves.
 
 
The snow-birds come in the morning,
Flocking and fluttering low,
And light on the graveyard brambles,
And twitter there in the snow.
 
 
The Singer, old and weary,
Looks out from his narrow room:
“Ah, me! but my thoughts are snow-birds,
Haunting a graveyard gloom,
 
 
“Where all the Past is buried
And dead, these many years,
Under the drifted whiteness
Of frozen falls of tears.
 
 
“Poor birds! that know not summer,
Nor sun, nor flowèrs fair,–
Only the graveyard brambles,
And graves, and winter air!”
 

VAGARY

 
Up and down the dusty street,
I hurry with my burning feet;
Against my face the wind-waves beat,
Fierce from the city-sea of heat.
Deep in my heart the vision is,
Of meadow grass and meadow trees
Blown silver in the summer breeze,
And ripe, red, hillside strawberries.
 
 
My sense the city tumult fills,–
The tumult that about me reels
Of strokes and cries, and feet and wheels.
Deep in my dream I list, and, hark!
From out the maple’s leafy dark,
The fluting of the meadow lark!
 
 
About the throngéd street I go:
There is no face here that I know;
Of all that pass me to and fro
There is no face here that I know.
Deep in my soul’s most sacred place,
With a sweet pain I look and trace
The features of a tender face,
All lit with love and girlish grace.
 
 
Some spell is on me, for I seem
A memory of the past, a dream
Of happiness remembered dim,
Unto myself that walk the street
Scathed with the city’s noontide heat,
With puzzled brain and burning feet.
 

FEUERBILDER

 
The children sit by the fireside
With their little faces in bloom;
And behind, the lily-pale mother,
Looking out of the gloom,
 
 
Flushes in cheek and forehead
With a light and sudden start;
But the father sits there silent,
From the firelight apart.
 
 
“Now, what dost thou see in the embers?
Tell it to me, my child,”
Whispers the lily-pale mother
To her daughter sweet and mild.
 
 
“O, I see a sky and a moon
In the coals and ashes there,
And under, two are walking
In a garden of flowers so fair.
 
 
“A lady gay, and her lover,
Talking with low-voiced words,
Not to waken the dreaming flowers
And the sleepy little birds.”
 
 
Back in the gloom the mother
Shrinks with a sudden sigh.
“Now, what dost thou see in the embers?”
Cries the father to the boy.
 
 
“O, I see a wedding-procession
Go in at the church’s door,–
Ladies in silk and knights in steel,–
A hundred of them, and more.
 
 
“The bride’s face is as white as a lily,
And the groom’s head is white as snow;
And without, with plumes and tapers,
A funeral paces slow.”
 
 
Loudly then laughed the father,
And shouted again for cheer,
And called to the drowsy housemaid
To fetch him a pipe and beer.
 

AVERY.
[Niagara, 1853.]

I
 
All night long they heard in the houses beside the shore,
Heard, or seemed to hear, through the multitudinous roar,
Out of the hell of the rapids as ’twere a lost soul’s cries,–
Heard and could not believe; and the morning mocked their eyes,
Showing, where wildest and fiercest the waters leaped up and ran
Raving round him and past, the visage of a man
Clinging, or seeming to cling, to the trunk of a tree that, caught
Fast in the rocks below, scarce out of the surges raught.
Was it a life, could it be, to yon slender hope that clung?
Shrill, above all the tumult the answering terror rung.
 
II
 
Under the weltering rapids a boat from the bridge is drowned,
Over the rocks the lines of another are tangled and wound;
And the long, fateful hours of the morning have wasted soon,
As it had been in some blessed trance, and now it is noon.
Hurry, now with the raft! But O, build it strong and stanch,
And to the lines and treacherous rocks look well as you launch!
Over the foamy tops of the waves, and their foam-sprent sides,
Over the hidden reefs, and through the embattled tides,
Onward rushes the raft, with many a lurch and leap,–
Lord! if it strike him loose from the hold he scarce can keep!
 
 
No! through all peril unharmed, it reaches him harmless at last,
And to its proven strength he lashes his weakness fast.
Now, for the shore! But steady, steady, my men, and slow;
Taut, now, the quivering lines; now slack; and so, let her go!
Thronging the shores around stand the pitying multitude;
Wan as his own are their looks, and a nightmare seems to brood
Heavy upon them, and heavy the silence hangs on all,
Save for the rapids’ plunge, and the thunder of the fall.
But on a sudden thrills from the people still and pale,
Chorussing his unheard despair, a desperate wail:
Caught on a lurking point of rock it sways and swings,
Sport of the pitiless waters, the raft to which he clings.
 
III
 
All the long afternoon it idly swings and sways;
And on the shore the crowd lifts up its hands and prays:
Lifts to heaven and wrings the hands so helpless to save,
Prays for the mercy of God on him whom the rock and the wave
Battle for, fettered betwixt them, and who, amidst their strife,
Struggles to help his helpers, and fights so hard for his life,–
Tugging at rope and at reef, while men weep and women swoon.
Priceless second by second, so wastes the afternoon,
And it is sunset now; and another boat and the last
Down to him from the bridge through the rapids has safely passed.
 
IV
 
Wild through the crowd comes flying a man that nothing can stay,
Maddening against the gate that is locked athwart his way.
“No! we keep the bridge for them that can help him. You,
Tell us, who are you?” “His brother!” “God help you both! Pass through.”
Wild, with wide arms of imploring he calls aloud to him,
Unto the face of his brother, scarce seen in the distance dim;
But in the roar of the rapids his fluttering words are lost
As in a wind of autumn the leaves of autumn are tossed.
And from the bridge he sees his brother sever the rope
Holding him to the raft, and rise secure in his hope;
Sees all as in a dream the terrible pageantry,–
Populous shores, the woods, the sky, the birds flying free;
Sees, then, the form,–that, spent with effort and fasting and fear,
Flings itself feebly and fails of the boat that is lying so near,–
Caught in the long-baffled clutch of the rapids, and rolled and hurled
Headlong on to the cataract’s brink, and out of the world.
 

BOPEEP: A PASTORAL

 
“O, to what uses shall we put
The wildweed flower that simply blows?
And is there any moral shut
Within the bosom of the rose?”
 
Tennyson.

I
 
She lies upon the soft, enamoured grass,
I’ the wooing shelter of an apple-tree,
And at her feet the trancéd brook is glass,
And in the blossoms over her the bee
Hangs charméd of his sordid industry;
For love of her the light wind will not pass.
 
II
 
Her golden hair, blown over her red lips,
That seem two rose-leaves softly breathed apart,
Athwart her rounded throat like sunshine slips;
Her small hand, resting on her beating heart,
The crook that tells her peaceful shepherd-art
Scarce keeps with light and tremulous finger-tips.
 
III
 
She is as fair as any shepherdess
That ever was in mask or Christmas scene:
Bright silver spangles hath she on her dress,
And of her red-heeled shoes appears the sheen;
And she hath ribbons of such blue or green
As best suits pastoral people’s comeliness.
 
IV
 
She sleeps, and it is in the month of May,
And the whole land is full of the delight
Of music and sweet scents; and all the day
The sun is gold; the moon is pearl all night,
And like a paradise the world is bright,
And like a young girl’s hopes the world is gay.
 
V
 
So waned the hours; and while her beauteous sleep
Was blest with many a happy dream of Love,
Untended still, her silly, vagrant sheep
Afar from that young shepherdess did rove,
Along the vales and through the gossip grove,
O’er daisied meads and up the thymy steep.
 
VI
 
Then (for it happens oft when harm is nigh,
Our dreams grow haggard till at last we wake)
She thought that from the little runnel by
There crept upon a sudden forth a snake,
And stung her hand, and fled into the brake;
Whereat she sprang up with a bitter cry,
 
VII
 
And wildly over all that place did look,
And could not spy her ingrate, wanton flock,–
Not there among tall grasses by the brook,
Not there behind the mossy-bearded rock;
And pitiless Echo answered with a mock
When she did sorrow that she was forsook.
 
VIII
 
Alas! the scattered sheep might not be found,
And long and loud that gentle maid did weep,
Till in her blurréd sight the hills went round,
And, circling far, field, wood, and stream did sweep;
And on the ground the miserable Bopeep
Fell and forgot her troubles in a swound.
 
IX
 
When she awoke, the sun long time had set,
And all the land was sleeping in the moon,
And all the flowers with dim, sad dews were wet,
As they had wept to see her in that swoon.
It was about the night’s low-breathing noon;
Only the larger stars were waking yet.
 
X
 
Bopeep, the fair and hapless shepherdess,
Rose from her swooning in a sore dismay,
And tried to smooth her damp and rumpled dress,
That showed in truth a grievous disarray;
Then where the brook the wan moon’s mirror lay,
She laved her eyes, and curled each golden tress.
 
XI
 
And looking to her ribbons, if they were
As ribbons of a shepherdess should be,
She took the hat that she was wont to wear
(Bedecked it was with ribbons flying free
As ever man in opera might see),
And set it on her curls of yellow hair.
 
XII
 
“And I will go and seek my sheep,” she said,
“Through every distant land until I die;
But when they bring me hither, cold and dead,
Let me beneath these apple-blossoms lie,
With this dear, faithful, lovely runnel nigh,
Here, where my cru–cru–cruel sheep have fed.”
 
XIII
 
Thus sorrow and despair make bold Bopeep,
And forth she springs, and hurries on her way:
Across the lurking rivulet she can leap,
No sombre forest shall her quest delay,
No crooked vale her eager steps bewray:
What dreadeth she that seeketh her lost sheep?
 
XIV
 
By many a pond, where timorous water-birds,
With clattering cries and throbbing wings, arose,
By many a pasture, where the soft-eyed herds
Looked shadow-huge in their unmoved repose,
Long through the lonesome night that sad one goes
And fills the solitude with wailing words;
 
XV
 
So that the little field-mouse dreams of harm,
Snuggled away from harm beneath the weeds;
The violet, sleeping on the clover’s arm,
Wakes, and is cold with thoughts of dreadful deeds;
The pensive people of the water-reeds
Hark with a mute and dolorous alarm.
 
XVI
 
And the fond hearts of all the turtle-doves
Are broken in compassion of her woe,
And every tender little bird that loves
Feels in his breast a sympathetic throe;
And flowers are sad wherever she may go,
And hoarse with sighs the waterfalls and groves.
 
XVII
 
The pale moon droppeth low; star after star
Grows faint and slumbers in the gray of dawn;
And still she lingers not, but hurries far,
Till in a dreary wilderness withdrawn
Through tangled woods she lorn and lost moves on,
Where griffins dire and dreadful dragons are.
 
XVIII
 
Her ribbons all are dripping with the dew,
Her red-heeled shoes are torn, and stained with mire,
Her tender arms the angry sharpness rue
Of many a scraggy thorn and envious brier;
And poor Bopeep, with no sweet pity nigh her,
Wrings her small hands, and knows not what to do.
 
XIX
 
And on that crude and rugged ground she sinks,
And soon her seeking had been ended there,
But through the trees a fearful glimmer shrinks,
And of a hermit’s dwelling she is ’ware:
At the dull pane a dull-eyed taper blinks,
Drowsed with long vigils and the morning air.
 
XX
 
Thither she trembling moves, and at the door
Falls down, and cannot either speak or stir:
The hermit comes,–with no white beard before,
Nor coat of skins, nor cap of shaggy fur:
It was a comely youth that lifted her,
And to his hearth, and to his breakfast, bore.
 
XXI
 
Arrayed he was in princeliest attire,
And of as goodly presence sooth was he
As any little maiden might admire,
Or any king-beholding cat might see
“My poor Bopeep,” he sigheth piteously,
“Rest here, and warm you at a hermit’s fire.”
 
XXII
 
She looked so beautiful, there, mute and white,
He kissed her on the lips and on the eyes
(The most a prince could do in such a plight);
But chiefly gazed on her in still surprise,
And when he saw her lily eyelids rise,
For him the whole world had no fairer sight.
 
XXIII
 
“Rude is my fare: a bit of venison steak,
A dish of honey and a glass of wine,
With clean white bread, is the poor feast I make.
Be served, I pray: I think this flask is fine,”
He said. “Hard is this hermit life of mine:
This day I will its weariness forsake.”
 
XXIV
 
And then he told her how it chanced that he,
King Cole’s son, in that forest held his court,
And the sole reason that there seemed to be
Was, he was being hermit there for sport;
But he confessed the life was not his forte,
And therewith both laughed out right jollily.
 
XXV
 
And sly Bopeep forgot her sheep again
In gay discourse with that engaging youth:
Love hath such sovran remedies for pain!
But then he was a handsome prince, in truth,
And both were young, and both were silly, sooth,
And everything to Love but love seems vain.
 
XXVI
 
They took them down the silver-claspéd book
That this young anchorite’s predecessor kept,–
A holy seer,–and through it they did look;
Sometimes their idle eyes together crept,
Sometimes their lips; but still the leaves they swept,
Until they found a shepherd’s pictured crook.
 
XXVII
 
And underneath was writ it should befall
On such a day, in such a month and year,
A maiden fair, a young prince brave and tall,
By such a chance should come together here.
They were the people, that was very clear:
“O love,” the prince said, “let us read it all!”
 
XXVIII
 
And thus the hermit’s prophecy ran on:
Though she her lost sheep wist not where to find,
Yet should she bid her weary care begone,
And banish every doubt from her sweet mind:
They, with their little snow-white tails behind,
Homeward would go, if they were left alone.
 
XXIX
 
They closed the book, and in her happy eyes
The prince read truth and love forevermore,–
Better than any hermit’s prophecies!
They passed together from the cavern’s door;
Embraced, they turned to look at it once more,
And over it beheld the glad sun rise,
 
XXX
 
That streamed before them aisles of dusk and gold
Under the song-swept arches of the wood,
And forth they went, tranced in each other’s hold,
Down through that rare and luminous solitude,
Their happy hearts enchanted in the mood
Of morning, and of May, and romance old.
 
XXXI
 
Sometimes the saucy leaves would kiss her cheeks,
And he must kiss their wanton kiss away;
To die beneath her feet the wood-flower seeks,
The quivering aspen feels a fine dismay,
And many a scented blossom on the spray
In odorous sighs its passionate longing speaks.
 
XXXII
 
And forth they went down to that stately stream,
Bowed over by the ghostly sycamores
(Awearily, as if some heavy dream
Held them in languor), but whose opulent shores
With pearléd shells and dusts of precious ores
Were tremulous brilliance in the morning beam;
 
XXXIII
 
Where waited them, beside the lustrous sand,
A silk-winged shallop, sleeping on the flood;
And smoothly wafted from the hither strand,
Across the calm, broad stream they lightly rode,
Under them still the silver fishes stood;
The eager lilies, on the other land,
 
XXXIV
 
Beckonéd them; but where the castle shone
With diamonded turrets and a wall
Of gold-embedded pearl and costly stone,
Their vision to its peerless splendor thrall
The maiden fair, the young prince brave and tall,
Thither with light, unlingering feet pressed on.
 
XXXV
 
A gallant train to meet this loving pair,
In silk and steel, moves from the castle door,
And up the broad and ringing castle stair
They go with gleeful minstrelsy before,
And “Hail our prince and princess evermore!”
From all the happy throng is greeting there.
 
XXXVI
 
And in the hall the prince’s sire, King Cole,
Sitting with crown and royal ermine on,
His fiddlers three behind with pipe and bowl,
Rises and moves to lift his kneeling son,
Greeting his bride with kisses many a one,
And tears and laughter from his jolly soul;
 
XXXVII
 
Then both his children to a window leads
That over daisied pasture-land looks out,
And shows Bopeep where her lost flock wide feeds,
And every frolic lambkin leaps about.
She hears Boy-Blue, that lazy shepherd, shout,
Slow pausing from his pipe of mellow reeds;
 
XXXVIII
 
And, turning, peers into her prince’s eyes;
Then, caught and clasped against her prince’s heart,
Upon her breath her answer wordless dies,
And leaves her gratitude to sweeter art,–
To lips from which the bloom shall never part,
To looks wherein the summer never dies!