Well,
well, she’s gone,
And I have tamed my sorrow.
Pain and grief
Are transitory things, no
less than joy;
And though they leave us not
the men we were,
Yet they do leave us.
You behold me here,
A man bereaved, with something
of a blight
Upon the early blossoms of
his life,
And its first verdure,—having
not the less
A living root, and drawing
from the earth
Its vital juices, from the
air its powers:
And surely as man’s
heart and strength are whole,
His appetites regerminate,
his heart
Re-opens, and his objects
and desires
Spring up renewed.
But though Artevelde speaks truly and well, you remember how Mr. Taylor, in that noble play, works out to our view the sad sight of the deterioration of character, the growing coarseness and harshness, the lessening tenderness and kindliness, which are apt to come with advancing years. Great trials, we know, passing over us, may influence us either for the worse or the better; and unless our nature is a very obdurate and poor one, though they may leave us, they will not leave us the men we were. Once, at a public meeting, I heard a man in eminent station make a speech. I had never seen him before; but I remembered an inscription which I had read, in a certain churchyard far away, upon the stone that marked the resting-place of his young wife, who had died many years before. I thought of its simple words of manly and hearty sorrow. I knew that the eminence he had reached had not come till she who would have been proudest of it was beyond knowing it or caring for it. And I cannot say with what interest and satisfaction I thought I could trace, in the features which were sad without the infusion