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ON your heart I feign myself fallen-ah, heavier burden,
Darling, of sorrow and pain than ever shall rest there!-I take you
Into these friendless arms of mine, that you cannot escape me-
Closer and closer I fold you and tell you all, and you listen,

Just as you used at home, and you let my sobs and my silence

Speak, when the words will not come, and you understand and forgive me.
-Ah! no, no! but I write, with the wretched bravado of distance,

What you must read unmoved by the pity too far for entreaty.

II.

Well, I could never have loved him, but when he sought me and asked me,When to the men that offered their lives, the love of a woman

Seemed so easy to give !-I promised the love that he asked me,
Sent him to war with my kiss on his lips, and thought him my hero.
Afterward came the doubt, and out of long question, self-knowledge;
Came that great defeat, and the heart of the nation was withered,—
Mine leaped high with the awful relief won of death. But the horror,
Then, of the crime that was wrought in that guilty moment of rapture-
Guilty as if my will had winged the bullet that struck him—
Clung to me day and night, and dreaming I saw him forever,
Looking through battle-smoke with sorrowful eyes of upbraiding,
Or, in the moonlight lying gray, or dimly approaching,
Holding toward me his arms, that still held nearer and nearer,

Entered, in the wear 1868, bv G P PUTNAM & SON, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the U. S. for the Southern District of N. Y.

VOL. II.-41

Folded about me at last. . . and I would I had died in the fever!-
Better then than now, and better than ever hereafter!

III.

Weary as some illusion of fever to me was the ocean-
Storm-swept, scourged with bitter rains, and wandering always
Onward from sky to sky with endless processions of surges,
Knowing not life or death, but since the light was, the first day,
Only enduring unrest till the darkness possess it, the last day.
Over its desolate depths we voyaged away from all living:
All the world behind us waned into vaguest remoteness;
Names, and faces, and scenes recurred like that broken remembrance
Of the anterior, bodiless life of the spirit-the trouble

Of a bewildered brain, or the touch of the Hand that created;
And when the ocean ceased at last like a faded illusion,

Europe itself seemed only a vision of eld and of sadness.

Nought but the dark in my soul remained to me constant and real,
Growing and taking the thoughts bereft of happier uses,
Blotting all sense of lapse from the days that with swift iteration
Were and were not. They fable the bright days the fleetest :

These that had nothing to give, that had nothing to bring or to promise

Went as one day alone. For me was no alternation

Save from my dull despair to wild and reckless rebellion,

When the regret for my sin was turned to ruthless self-pity—

When I hated him whose love had made me its victim,

Through his faith and my falsehood yet claiming me. Then I was smitten
With so great remorse, such grief for him, and compassion,

That, if he could have come back to me, I had welcomed and loved him
More than man e'er was loved.-Alas, for me that another
Holds his place in my heart evermore! Alas, that I listened
When the words whose daring lured my spirit and lulled it,
Seemed to take my blame away with my strength of resistance!
Do not make haste to condemn me: my will was a woman's
Fain to be broken by love: yet unto the last I endeavored
What I could to be faithful still to the past and my penance;
And as we stood that night in the old Roman garden together-
By the fountain whose passionate tears but now had implored me
In his pleading voice-and he waited my answer, I told him
All that had been before of delusion and guilt, and conjured him
Not to darken his fate with me. The costly endeavor
Only was subtler betrayal. O me, from the pang of confession,
Sprang what strange delight, as I tore from its lurking that horror
Brooded upon so long, with the hope that at last I might see it
Through his eyes unblurred by the tears that disordered my vision !
O, with what rapturous triumph I humbled my spirit before him,
That he might lift me and soothe me, and make that dreary remembrance,

All this confusèd present seem only some sickness of fancy,
Only a morbid folly, no certain and actual trouble!

If from that refuge I fled with words of too feeble denial-
Bade him hate me, with sobs that entreated his tenderest pity,
Moved mute lips and left the meaningless farewell unuttered,—
She that never has loved, alone can wholly condemn me.

IV.

How could he other than follow? My heart had bidden him follow,
Nor had my lips forbidden; and Rome yet glimmered behind me,
When my soul yearned toward his from the sudden forlornness of absence.
Everywhere his face looked from vanishing glimpses of faces,
Everywhere his voice reached my senses in fugitive cadence.

Sick, through the storied cities, with wretched hopes, and upbraidings
Of my own heart for its hopes, I went from wonder to wonder,
Blind to them all, or only beholding them wronged and related,
Through some trick of disordered thought, to myself and my trouble.
Not surprise nor regret, but a fierce, precipitate gladness

Sent the blood to my throbbing heart when I found him in Venice.
"Waiting for you," he whispered; "you would so." I answered him nothing.

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Father, whose humor grows more silent and ever more absent
(Changed in all but love for me since the death of my mother),
Willing to see me contented at last, and trusting us wholly,
Left us together alone in our world of love and of beauty.
So, by noon and by night, we two have wandered in Venice,

Where the beautiful lives in vivid and constant caprices,

Yet, where the charm is so perfect that nothing fantastic surprises
More than in dreams, and one's life with the life of the city is blended
In a luxurious calm, and the whole world without and beyond it
Seems but the emptiest fable of vain aspiration and labor.

Yes, from all that makes this Venice sole among cities,
Peerless forever-the still lagoons that sleep in the sunlight,
Lulled by their island-bells-the night's mysterious waters,

Lit through their shadowy depths by stems of splendor that blossom
Into the lamps that float, like flamy lotuses, over-

Narrow and secret canals, that dimly gleaming and glooming

Under palace-walls and numberless arches of bridges,

List no sound but the dip of the gondolier's oar and his warning
Cried from corner to corner-the sad, superb Canalazzo

Mirroring marvellous grandeur and beauty, and dreaming of glory
Out of the empty homes of her lords departed—the footways

Wandering sunless between the walls of the houses, and stealing
Glimpses, through rusted cancelli, of lurking greenness of gardens,
Wild-grown flowers and broken statues and mouldering frescoes-
Thoroughfares filled with traffic, and throngs ever ebbing and flowing
To and from the heart of the city, whose pride and devotion,
Lifting high the bells of Saint Mark's like prayers unto heaven,
Stretch a marble embrace of palaces tow'rd the cathedral

Orient, gorgeous, and flushed with color and light, like the morning-
From the lingering waste that is not yet ruin in Venice,

And her phantasmal show through all of being and doing-
Came a strange joy to us, untouched by regret for the idle

Days without yesterdays that died into nights without morrows.
Here, in our paradise of love we reigned, new-created,

As in the youth of the world, in the days before evil and conscience.
Ah! in our fair, lost world was neither fearing nor doubting,
Neither the sickness of old remorse, nor the gloom of foreboding,
Only the glad surrender of all individual being

Unto him whom I loved, and in whose tender possession,
Fate-free, my soul reposed from its anguish.

-Of these things I write you

As of another's experience-part of my own they no longer

Seem to me now through the doom that darkens the past like the future.

VI.

Golden the sunset gleamed, above the city behind us, Out of a city of clouds as fairy and lovely as Venice, While we looked at the fishing-sails of purple and yellow Far on the rim of the sea, whose light and musical surges

Broke along the sands with a faint, reiterant sadness.

But, when the sails had darkened into black wings, through the twilight
Sweeping away into night-past the broken tombs of the Hebrews
Homeward we sauntered slowly, through dew-sweet, blossomy alleys;
So drew near the boat by errant and careless approaches,
Entered, and left with indolent pulses the Lido behind us.

All the sunset had paled, and the campanili of Venice
Rose like the masts of a mighty fleet moored there in the water.
Lights flashed furtively to and fro through the deepening twilight.
Massed in one thick shade lay the Gardens; the numberless islands
Lay like shadows upon the lagoons. And on us as we loitered
By their enchanted coasts, a spell of ineffable sweetness
Fell and made us at one with them; and silent and blissful
Shadows we seemed that drifted on through a being of shadow,
Vague, indistinct to ourselves, unbounded by hope or remembrance.
Yet, we knew the beautiful night as it grew from the twilight:

Far beneath us and far above us the vault of the heavens

Glittered and darkened; the moon, that long had haunted the daylight,
Wan and thin, then rose 'mid the stars in her fulness of splendor;
And over all the lagoons fell the silvery rain of the moonbeams

As in the chansons the young girls sang while their gondolas passed us—
Sang in the joy of love, or youth's desire of loving.

Balmy night of the South! Oh perfect night of the Summer! Night of the distant dark, of the near and tender effulgence !— How from my despair are thy peace and loveliness frightened! For, while our boat lay there at the will of the light undulations, Idle as if our mood imbued and controlled it, yet ever

Seeming to bear us on athwart those shining expanses

Out to shining seas beyond pursuit or returning

There, while we lingered, and lingered, and would not break from our rapture,

Down the mirrored night another gondola drifted

Nearer and slowly nearer our own, and moonlighted faces

Stared. And that sweet trance grew a rigid and dreadful possession,

Which, if no dream indeed, yet mocked with such semblance of dreaming,
That as it happens in dreams, when a dear face stooping to kiss us,
Takes, ere the lips have touched, some malign and horrible aspect,
His face faded away, and the face of the Dead-of that other-
Flashed on mine, and writhing through every change of emotion,-
Wild amaze and scorn, accusation and pitiless mocking,—
Vanished into the swoon whose blackness encompassed and hid me.

PHILIP.--To Bertha,

I AM not sure, I own, that if first I had seen my delusion
When I saw you, last night, I should be so ready to give you
Now your promises back, and hold myself nothing above you,
That it is mine to offer a freedom you never could ask for.
Yet, believe me, indeed, from no bitter heart I release you :
You are as free of me now, as though I had died in the battle,

Or as I never had lived. Nay, if it is mine to forgive you,

Go without share of the blame that could hardly be all upon your side.

Ghosts are not sensitive things; yet, after my death in the papers,
Sometimes a harrowing doubt assailed this impalpable essence:
Had I done so well to plead my cause at that moment,

When your consent must be yielded less to the lover than soldier?
"Not so well," I was answered by that ethereal conscience
Ghosts have about them, "and not so nobly or wisely as might be."
-Truly, I loved you, then, as now I love you no longer.

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