That was a bland and holy morn,
Like one, on very purpose, born,
A gray godmother
stood,
Before the chancel’s sacred place,
With Frankie’s sweet and artless grace,
And heard the
preacher good.
And as the bright baptism fell,
Upon her fallen tresses well,
And o’er her bosom’s chastened swell,
The beauteous
maiden smiled:
She looked a wingless cherub then—
My inmost spirit fluttered, when
I said, O wondrous
child!
I thought a troop of angels stood
Amid that lofty fane,
And (I in that ecstatic mood)
They sped to bliss again.
That, whole bright day, I wandered wide,
O’er sunny
hill and vale,
And thought no day of brighter pride
E’er lay
on Elfindale;
I thought, that day dear Frankie love,
Had been new-linked with those above;
And henceforth angels would attend
The maiden, to her journey’s end.
Fair Frankie grew in attributes
That harmonized like golden flutes,
Or harps of silver
strain:
She loved the Lovely—growing so,
With every year’s advancing flow;—
She was the Death
of Pain!
The dwellers in green Elfindale,
Were happier all
for her,
The very flowers she loved to trail,
With pleasure’s
thrill, would stir.
She loved both man and brute that dwelt
Within that vale
of Good;
And they, as bettered beings, felt
New virtue—as
they should.
And thus a shining, golden chain,
Of many links
of love,
Knit Frankie to the peopled plain,
And to the good
above.
Affection’s wreathed rings of beauty,
Bound round a
globe of gold;
It is my verse’s pleasing duty,
To say to all,
behold,
Sweet Frank that central globe of worth;
That gems, with pride, this spot of earth,
This flower-engirdled, blissful vale,
This heart-delighting Elfindale.
And now when lovely Frankie stood,
In the dear pride of womanhood,
The queen of Elfindale;
One sought her for her loveliness—
A joy—a heaven of happiness—
An earth-born angel meant to bless
My throbbing soul with rich excess
Of joys that never
fail.
She sat hid in a garden bower,
Watching the first,
sweet star,
That crowns the lovely twilight hour,
And glows to earth
from far.
A sad sweet dream oppressed her thought,
And tinged her
calm, white face;
Her eyes fixed fast, their radiance fraught,
With melancholy
grace.
I stole unto her close retreat,
As winds creep
on a vale;
And, standing, gazed upon the sweet,
Sweet queen of
Elfindale.
She turned her head, she faintly smiled,
She bent her gaze
on me;
It made my very spirit wild,
With thrilling
ecstacy.
I caught and clasped, her to my heart,
Yet never spoke
a word;—
But the twin-vow that could not part,
By Love in Heaven
was heard.