Only I hope and trust without any fight in the city.
Do you see Mr. Claude?—I thought he might do something for you.
I am quite sure on occasion he really would wish to be useful.
What is he doing? I wonder;—still studying Vatican marbles?
Letters, I hope, pass through. We trust your brother is better.
VI.—CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.
Juxtaposition, in fine; and what is juxtaposition?
Look you, we travel along in the railway-carriage,
or steamer,
And, pour passer le temps, till
the tedious journey be ended,
Lay aside paper or book, to talk with
the girl that is next one;
And, pour passer le temps, with
the terminus all but in
prospect,
Talk of eternal ties and marriages made
in heaven.
Ah, did we really accept with
a perfect heart the illusion!
Ah, did we really believe that the Present
indeed is the Only!
Or through all transmutation, all shock
and convulsion of passion,
Feel we could carry undimmed, unextinguished,
the light of our
knowledge!
But for his funeral train
which the bridegroom sees in the distance,
Would he so joyfully, think you, fall
in with the marriage-procession?
But for that final discharge, would he
dare to enlist in that service?
But for that certain release, ever sign
to that perilous contract?
But for that exit secure, ever bend to
that treacherous doorway?—
Ah, but the bride, meantime,—do
you think she sees it as he does?
But for the steady fore-sense
of a freer and larger existence,
Think you that man could consent to be
circumscribed here into action?
But for assurance within of a limitless
ocean divine, o’er
Whose great tranquil depths unconscious
the wind-tost surface
Breaks into ripples of trouble that come
and change and endure not,—
But that in this, of a truth, we have
our being, and know it,
Think you we men could submit to live
and move as we do here?
Ah, but the women,—God bless
them!—they don’t think at all about
it.
Yet we must eat and drink,
as you say. And as limited beings
Scarcely can hope to attain upon earth
to an Actual Abstract,
Leaving to God contemplation, to His hands
knowledge confiding,
Sure that in us if it perish, in Him it
abideth and dies not,
Let us in His sight accomplish our petty
particular doings,—
Yes, and contented sit down to the victual
that He has provided.
Allah is great, no doubt, and Juxtaposition
his prophet.
Ah, but the women, alas, they don’t
look at it in that way!
Juxtaposition is great;—but,
my friend, I fear me, the maiden
Hardly would thank or acknowledge the
lover that sought to obtain her,
Not as the thing he would wish, but the
thing he must even put up
with,—
Hardly would tender her hand to the wooer