O Nature! bare thy loving
breast
And give thy child one
hour of rest,
One little hour to lie
unseen
Beneath thy scarf of
leafy green!
So, curtained by a singing
pine,
Its murmuring voice
shall blend with mine,
Till, lost in dreams,
my faltering lay
In sweeter music dies
away.
X
Iris, her book
I pray thee by the soul
of her that bore thee,
By thine own sister’s
spirit I implore thee,
Deal gently with the
leaves that lie before thee!
For Iris had no mother
to infold her,
Nor ever leaned upon
a sister’s shoulder,
Telling the twilight
thoughts that Nature told her.
She had not learned
the mystery of awaking
Those chorded keys that
soothe a sorrow’s aching,
Giving the dumb heart
voice, that else were breaking.
Yet lived, wrought,
suffered. Lo, the pictured token!
Why should her fleeting
day-dreams fade unspoken,
Like daffodils that
die with sheaths unbroken?
She knew not love, yet
lived in maiden fancies,
Walked simply clad,
a queen of high romances,
And talked strange tongues
with angels in her trances.
Twin-souled she seemed,
a twofold nature wearing,
Sometimes a flashing
falcon in her daring,
Then a poor mateless
dove that droops despairing.
Questioning all things:
Why her Lord had sent her?
What were these torturing
gifts, and wherefore lent her?
Scornful as spirit fallen,
its own tormentor.
And then all tears and
anguish: Queen of Heaven,
Sweet Saints, and Thou
by mortal sorrows riven,
Save me! oh, save me!
Shall I die forgiven?
And then—Ah,
God! But nay, it little matters
Look at the wasted seeds
that autumn scatters,
The myriad germs that
Nature shapes and shatters!
If she had—Well!
She longed, and knew not wherefore
Had the world nothing
she might live to care for?
No second self to say
her evening prayer for?
She knew the marble
shapes that set men dreaming,
Yet with her shoulders
bare and tresses streaming
Showed not unlovely
to her simple seeming.
Vain? Let it be
so! Nature was her teacher.
What if a lonely and
unsistered creature
Loved her own harmless
gift of pleasing feature,
Saying, unsaddened,—This
shall soon be faded,
And double-hued the
shining tresses braided,
And all the sunlight
of the morning shaded?
—This her
poor book is full of saddest follies,
Of tearful smiles and
laughing melancholies,
With summer roses twined
and wintry hollies.
In the strange crossing
of uncertain chances,
Somewhere, beneath some
maiden’s tear-dimmed glances
May fall her little
book of dreams and fancies.