Marion Dale,—no longer our
Marion,—
You have gone your way, and I have gone
mine:
Lowly I’ve labored, while fashion’s
gay clarion
Trumpets your name through the waltz and
the wine.
And when I meet you, your smile it is
colder;
Statelier, prouder your features have
grown;
Rounder each white and magnificent shoulder;
(Rather too low-necked your waist, I must
own.)
Jewelled and muslined, your rich hair
gold-netted,
Queenly ’mid flattering voices you
move,—
Half to your own native graces indebted,
Half to the station and fortune you love.
“Marion” we called you; my
wife you called “Alice”;
I was plain “Phil";—we
were intimate all:
Strange, as we leave now our cards at
your palace,
On Mrs. Prime Goldbanks of Bubblemere
Hall!
Six golden lackeys illumine the doorway:
Sure, one would think, by the glances
they throw,
That we were fresh from the mountains
of Norway,
And had forgotten to shake off the snow!
They will permit us to enter, however;
Usher us into her splendid saloon:
There we sit waiting and waiting forever,
As one would watch for the rise of the
moon.
Or it may be to-day’s not her “reception”:
Still she’s at home, and a little
unbends,—
Framing, while dressing, some harmless
deception,
How she shall meet her “American”
friends.
Smiling you meet us,—but not
quite sincerely;
Low-voiced you greet us,—but
this is the ton:
This, we must feel it, is courtesy merely,—
Not the glad welcome of days that are
gone.
You are in England,—the land
where they freeze one,
When they’ve a mind to, with fashion
and form:
Yet, if you choose, you can thoroughly
please one:
Currents run through you still youthful
and warm.
So one would think, at least, seeing you
moving,
Radiant and gay, at the Countess’s
fete.
Say, was that babble so sweeter than loving?
Where was the charm, that you lingered
so late?
Ah, well enough, as you dance on in joyance!
Still well enough, at your dinners and
calls!
Fashion and riches will mask much annoyance.
Float on, fair lady, whatever befalls!
Yet, Lady Marion, for hours and for hours
You are alone with your husband and lord.
There is a skeleton hid in yon flowers;
There is a spectre at bed and at board.
Needs no confession to tell there is acting
Somewhere about you a tragedy grim.
All your bright rays have a sullen refracting;
Everywhere looms up the image of him:
Him,—whom you love not, there
is no concealing.
How could you love him, apart from
his gold?
Nothing now left but your fire-fly wheeling,—
Flashing one moment, then pallid and cold!