Then on before a thin-legged robin hops,
Or leaping on a twig, he pertly stops,
Speaking a few clear notes,
till nigh
We draw, when quickly he will
fly
Into a bush close by.
A flock of goldfinches may stop their
flight,
And wheeling round a birchen tree alight
Deep in its glittering leaves,
until
They see us, when their swift
rise will
Startle a sudden thrill.
I recollect my lady in a wood,
Keeping her breath and peering—(firm
she stood
Her slim shape balanced on
tiptoe—)
Into a nest which lay below,
Leaves shadowing her brow.
I recollect my lady asking me,
What that sharp tapping in the wood might
be?
I told her blackbirds made
it, which,
For slimy morsels they count
rich,
Cracked the snail’s
curling niche:
She made no answer. When we reached
the stone
Where the shell fragments on the grass
were strewn,
Close to the margin of a rill;
“The air,” she
said, “seems damp and chill,
“We’ll go home
if you will.”
“Make not my pathway dull so soon,”
I cried,
“See how those vast cloudpiles in
sun-glow dyed,
“Roll out their splendour:
while the breeze
“Lifts gold from leaf
to leaf, as these
“Ash saplings move at
ease.”
Piercing the silence in our ears, a bird
Threw some notes up just then, and quickly
stirred
The covert birds that startled,
sent
Their music thro’ the
air; leaves lent
Their rustling and blent,
Until the whole of the blue warmth was
filled
So much with sun and sound, that the air
thrilled.
She gleamed, wrapt in the
dying day’s
Glory: altho’ she
spoke no praise,
I saw much in her gaze.
Then, flushed with resolution, I told
all;—
The mighty love I bore her,—how
would pall
My very breath of life, if
she
For ever breathed not hers
with me;—
Could I a cherub be,
How, idly hoping to enrich her grace,
I would snatch jewels from the orbs of
space;—
Then back thro’ the
vague distance beat,
Glowing with joy her smile
to meet,
And heap them round her feet.
Her waist shook to my arm. She bowed
her head,
Silent, with hands clasped and arms straightened:
(Just then we both heard a
church bell)
O God! It is not right
to tell:
But I remember well
Each breast swelled with its pleasure,
and her whole
Bosom grew heavy with love; the swift
roll
Of new sensations dimmed her
eyes,
Half closing them in ecstasies,
Turned full against the skies.
The rest is gone; it seemed a whirling
round—
No pressure of my feet upon the ground:
But even when parted from
her, bright
Showed all; yea, to my throbbing
sight
The dark was starred with
light.