Fringilla: Some Tales In Verse | Page 6

R.D. Blackmore
heart already knew?The way to conquer doubt
I
"When sleep was in the summer air,?And stars looked down on Paradise,?And palms and cedars answered fair?The visionary night-wind's sighs,?And murmuring prayer:
When every flower was in its hood?(By clasps of diamond dew retained),?Or sunk to elude Phalcena's brood,?Down slumber's breast with shadows veined,?In solitude:
The citron, stephanote, and rose,?Pomegranate, hoya, calycanth,?And yet unwanted amaranth,?Were sweetness in repose:
II
When rivulets were loth to creep,?Except unto the pillow moss,?And distant lake, encurtained deep,?Was but a silver thread across?The eyes of sleep:
When nightingales, in the sycamore,?Sang low and soft, as an echo dreaming;?And slept the moon upon heaven's shore--?The tidal shore of heaven, beaming?With lazuled ore:
When new-born earth was fain to lean?In Summer's arms, recovering?The unaccustomed toil of Spring,?Why slept not Eve, their Queen?
III
Upon a smooth fern-mantled stone?She sat, and watched the wicket-gate,?Not timid in her woman's throne,?Nor lonely in her sinless state,?Though all alone;
For having spread her simple board?With grapes, and peaches, milk, and flowers,?She strewed sweet mastic o'er the sward,?And waited through the bridal hours?Step of her lord.
Such innocence around her breathed,?And freshness of young nature's play,?The sensitive plant shrank not away,?And cactus' swords were sheathed.
IV
The vision of her beauty fell,?Like music on a moonlit place,?Or trembles of a silver bell,?Or memories of a sacred face,?Too dear to tell:
The grace that wandered free of laws,?The look that lit the heart's confession,?Had never dreamed how fair it was;?Nor guessed that purity's expression?Is beauty's cause:
No more that unenquiring heart?Perused the sweet home of her breast,?Than turtle-doves unline their nest?To scan the outer part
V
Although, in all that garden fair,?Whate'er delight abode, or grew,?Flowers, and trees, and balmy air,?Fountains, and birds, and heaven blue?Beyond compare:
In her their various charms had met,?And grown more varied by combining,?As budded plants do give and get,?Each inmate doubling while resigning?His several debt:
And yet she nursed one joy, above?Her thousand charms, nor bora of them,?But blooming on a single stem--?Her true faith in her love.
VI
And though, before she heard his foot,?The moon had climbed the homestead palm,?Flinging to her the shadowed fruit,?And tree-frogs ceased to break the calm,?And birds were mute,
With sudden transport ever new,?She blushed, and sprang from forth the bower,?Her eyes, as bright as moon-lit dew,?Her bosom glad as snow-veiled flower,?When sun shines through;
He, with a natural dignity?Untaught self-consciousness by harm,?Sustained her with his manly arm,?And smiled upon her glee.
VII
Next day, when early evening shone?Along the walks of Paradise,?Strewing with gold the hills, her throne,?Embarrassing the winds with spice?(Too rich a loan),
Fair Eve was in her bower of ease,?A cool arcade of fruit and flowers,
From North and East enclasped by trees,?But open to the Western showers,?And Southern breeze.
Here followed she her gardening trade,?Her favourites' simple needs attending,?And singing soft, above them bending,?A song herself had made.
VIII
In evening's calm, she walked between?The tints and shades of rich delight,?While overhead came, arching green,?Many a shrub and parasite,?To crown their Queen;
There laughed the joy of the rose, among?Myrtle and Iris, heaven's eye,?Magnole, with cups of moonlight hung,?And Fuchsia's sunny chandlery,?And coral tongue;
And where the shy brook fluttered through,?Nepenthe held her chalice leaf?(Undrained as yet by human grief),?And broad Nymphaea grew.
IX
But where the path bent towards the wood,?Across it hung a sombre screen,?The deadly night-shade, leaden-hued;?And there behind it, darkly seen,?A Being stood:
The form, if any form it had,?Was likest to a nightly vision?In mantle of amazement clad,?A terror-sense, without precision,?Of something bad.
A tremble chilled the forest shade,?A roving lion turned and fled,?The birds cowered home in hush of dread;?But Eve was not afraid.
X
She stood before him, sweetly bold,?To keep him from her garden shrine,?With hair that fell, a shower of gold,?Around her figure's snowy line?And rosy mould:
He (with a re-awakened sense?Of goodness, long for ever lost,?And angel beauty's pure defence)?Shrank back, unable to accost?Such innocence:
But envy soon scoffed down his shame;?And with a smile, designed for fawning,?But like hell's daybreak sickly dawning,?His crafty accents came.
XI
"Sweet ignorance, 'tis sad and hard?To break thy fond confiding spell;?And my soft heart hath such regard?For thine, that I will never tell?What may be spared."
He turned aside, o'erwhelmed with pain,?And drew a sigh of deep compassion:?She trembled, flushed, and gazed again,?And prayed him quick, in woman's fashion,?To speak it plain:
"Then, if thou must be taught to grieve,?And scorn the guile thou hast adored--?The man who calls himself thy lord,?Where goes he, every eve?"
XII
"Nay, then," she cried, "if that be all,?I care not what thou hast to say;?The guile that lurks therein is small--?My husband but retires to pray,?At evening call."
"To pray? Oh yes, and on his knees?May-hap to find a lovely being:?Devotions so devout as these?Are best at night, with no one seeing,?Among the trees."
She blushed as deep as modesty,?Then glancing back as bright as cride,?"What woman can he find,' she cried,?"In all the world, but me?"
XIII
He laughed with a superior sneer,?Enough to shake e'en woman's faith;?"Wilt thou believe me, simple dear,?If
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