Fringilla: Some Tales In Verse | Page 9

R.D. Blackmore
shouldst have wept for all of us--?Thou mournest thine own ease I
III
The mother of all loving wives?(Condemned unborn to many a tear)?Is fain to take his hand, and strives?In sorrow to be doubly dear--?But shame deprives.
[Illustration: 098.]
The shame, the woe, the black surprise,?That love's first dream should have such ending,?To weep, and wipe neglected eyes I?Oh loss of true love, far transcending?Lost Paradise!
For is it faith, that cannot live?One gloomy hour, and soar above?The clouds of fate? And is it love,?That will not e'en forgive?
IV
The houseless monarch of the earth?Hath quickly found what empire means;?For while he scoffs with bitter mirth,?And curses, after Eden's scenes,?This dreary dearth.
A snake, that twined in playful zeal,?But yester morn, around his ankle,?Now driven along the dust to steal,?Steals up, and leaves its venom'd rankle?Deep in his heel.
He groans awhile. He seeks anon?For comfort to this first of pain,?Where all his sons to-day are fain;?He seeks--but Eve is gone!
PART I--ADAM
_O'er hill, and highland, moor, and plain,?A hundred years, he seeks in vain;?Oer hill and plain, a hundred years,?He pours the sorrow no one hears;?Yet finds, as wildest mourners find,?Some ease of heart in toil of mind._
I
"YE mountains, that forbid the day,?Ye glens, that are the steps of night,?How long amid you must I stray,?Deserted, banished from God's sight,?And castaway?
"Ye trees and flowers the Lord hath made,?Ye beasts, to my good-will committed--?Although your trust hath been betrayed--?Not long ago ye would have pitied?Your old comrade.
"Oh, nature, noblest when alone,?Albeit I love your outward part;?The nature that enthrals my heart?Must be more like my own.
II
"The Maker once appointed me--?I know not, and I care not why--?The lord of everything I see,?Or if they walk, or swim, or fly,?Whate'er they be.
"And all the earth whereon they dwell,?And all the heavens they are inhaling,?And powers, whereof I cannot tell--?Dark miscreants, supine and wailing,?Until I fell.
"Twas good and glorious to believe;?But now mv majesty is o'er;?And I would give it all, and more,?For one sweet glimpse of Eve.
III
"For what is glory, what is power??And what the pride of standing first??A twig struck down by a thunder shower,?A crown of thistle to quench the thirst,?A sun-scorched flower.
"God grant the men who spring from me,?As knowledge waxeth deep and splendid,?To find a loftier pedigree?Than any by the Lord intended--?Frog, slug, or tree!
"So shall they live, without the grief?Of having womankind to love,?Find nought below, and less above,?And be their own belief.
IV
"So weak was I, so poorly taught,?By any but my Maker's voice,?Too happy to indulge in thought,?Which gives me Tittle to rejoice,?And ends in nought.
"But now and then, my path grows clear,?My mind casts off its grim confusion,?When I have chanced on goodly cheer:?Then happiness seems no delusion,?Even down here.
"With love and faith, to bless the curse,?To heal the mind by touch of heart,?To make me feel my better part,?And fight against the worse.
V
"It may be that I did o'erprize,?Above the Giver, that rare gift,?Ungird my will for softer ties,?And hold my manhood little thrift?To woman's eyes.
"So far she was, so full of grace,?So innocent with coy caresses,?So proud to step at my own pace,?So rosy through her golden tresses;?And such a face!
"Suffice my sins; I'll ne'er approve?A thought against my faithful Eve;?Suffice my sins; I'll never believe.?That it was one, to love.
VI
"Oh; love, if e'er this desert plain,?Where I must sweat with axe and spade,?Shall hold a people sprung from twain,?Or better made by Him, who made?That pair in vain.
"Shall any know, as we have known,?Thy rapture, terror, vaunting, fretting,?Profound despair, ecstatic tone,?Crowning of reason, and upsetting?Of reason's throne?
"Bright honey quaffed from cells of gall,?Or crimson sting from creamy rose--?Thy heavenly half from Eden flows,?Thy venom from our fall."
_Awhile he ceased; far scorching woe?Had made a drought of vocal flow;?When hungry, weary, desolate,?A fox crept home to his defis gate.?The sight brought Adam's memory back,?And touched him with a keener lack._
VII
"Home! Where is home? Of old I thought?(Or felt in mystery of bliss)?That so divinely was I wrought?As not to care for that or this,?And value nought;
"But sit or saunter, rest or roam,?Regarding all things most sublimely,?As if enthroned on heaven's dome;?Away with paltry and untimely?Hankerings for _Home!_
"But now the weary heart is fain?For shelter in some lowly nest--?To sink upon a softer breast,?And smile away its pain,
VIII
"For me, what home, what hope is left??What difference of good or ill??Of all I ever loved bereft,?Disgraced, discarded, outlawed still,?For one small theft!
"I sicken of my skill and pride;?I work, without a bit of caring.?The world is waste, the world is wide;?Why make good things, with no one sharing?Them at my side?
"What matters how I dwell, or die??Away with such a niggard life!?The Lord hath robbed me of my wife;?And life is only I.
IX
"God, who hast said it is not good?For man, thy son, to live alone;?Is everlasting solitude,?When once united bliss was
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