Lucile






CANTO II.

     I.
     LETTER FROM LORD ALFRED VARGRAVE TO THE COMTESSE DE NEVERS.

     BIGORRE, TUESDAY.
     "Your note, Madam, reach'd me to-day, at Bigorre,
     And commands (need I add?) my obedience.  Before
     The night I shall be at Luchon—where a line,
     If sent to Duval's, the hotel where I dine,
     Will find me, awaiting your orders.  Receive
     My respects.
                "Yours sincerely,
                              "A. VARGRAVE.
                                           "I leave
     In an hour."
     II.
                In an hour from the time he wrote this
     Alfred Vargrave, in tracking a mountain abyss,
     Gave the rein to his steed and his thoughts, and pursued,
     In pursuing his course through the blue solitude,
     The reflections that journey gave rise to.
                                                 And
     (Because, without some such precaution, I fear
     You might fail to distinguish, them each from the rest
     Of the world they belong to; whose captives are drest,
     As our convicts, precisely the same one and all,
     While the coat cut for Peter is pass'd on to Paul)
     I resolve, one by one, when I pick from the mass
     The persons I want, as before you they pass,
     To label them broadly in plain black and white
     On the backs of them.  Therefore whilst yet he's in sight,
     I first label my hero.
     III.
                             The age is gone o'er
     When a man may in all things be all.  We have more
     Painters, poets, musicians, and artists, no doubt,
     Than the great Cinquecento gave birth to; but out
     Of a million of mere dilettanti, when, when
     Will a new LEONARDO arise on our ken?
     He is gone with the age which begat him.  Our own
     Is too vast, and too complex, for one man alone
     To embody its purpose, and hold it shut close
     In the palm of his hand.  There were giants in those
     Irreclaimable days; but in these days of ours,
     In dividing the work, we distribute the powers.
     Yet a dwarf on a dead giant's shoulders sees more
     Than the 'live giant's eyesight availed to explore;
     And in life's lengthen'd alphabet what used to be
     To our sires X Y Z is to us A B C.
     A Vanini is roasted alive for his pains,
     But a Bacon comes after and picks up his brains.
     A Bruno is angrily seized by the throttle
     And hunted about by thy ghost, Aristotle,
     Till a More or Lavater step into his place:
     Then the world turns and makes an admiring grimace.
     Once the men were so great and so few, they appear,
     Through a distant Olympian atmosphere,
     Like vast Caryatids upholding the age.
     Now the men are so many and small, disengage
     One man from the million to mark him, next moment
     The crowd sweeps him hurriedly out of your comment;
     And since we seek vainly (to praise in our songs)
     'Mid our fellows the size which to heroes belongs,
     We take the whole age for a hero, in want
     Of a better; and still, in its favor, descant
     On the strength and the beauty which, failing to find
     In any one man, we ascribe to mankind.
     IV.
     Alfred Vargrave was one of those men who achieve
     So little, because of the much they conceive:
     With irresolute finger he knock'd at each one
     Of the doorways of life, and abided in none.
     His course, by each star that would cross it, was set,
     And whatever he did he was sure to regret.
     That target, discuss'd by the travellers of old,
     Which to one appear'd argent, to one appear'd gold,
     To him, ever lingering on Doubt's dizzy margent,
     Appear'd in one moment both golden and argent.
     The man who seeks one thing in life, and but one,
     May hope to achieve it before life be done;
     But he who seeks all things, wherever he goes,
     Only reaps from the hopes which around him he sows
     A harvest of barren regrets.  And the worm
     That crawls on in the dust to the definite term
     Of its creeping existence, and sees nothing more
     Than the path it pursues till its creeping be o'er,
     In its limited vision, is happier far
     Than the Half-Sage, whose course, fix'd by no friendly star
     Is by each star distracted in turn, and who knows
     Each will still be as distant wherever he goes.
     V.
     Both brilliant and brittle, both bold and unstable,
     Indecisive yet keen, Alfred Vargrave seem'd able
     To dazzle, but not to illumine mankind.
     A vigorous, various, versatile mind;
     A character wavering, fitful, uncertain,
     As the shadow that shakes o'er a luminous curtain,
     Vague, flitting, but on it forever impressing
     The shape of some substance at which you stand guessing:
     When you said, "All is worthless and weak here," behold!
     Into sight on a sudden there seem'd to unfold
     Great outlines of strenuous truth in the man:
     When you said, "This is genius," the outlines grew wan,
     And his life, though in all things so gifted and skill'd,
     Was, at best, but a promise which nothing fulfill'd.
     VI.
     In the budding of youth, ere wild winds can deflower
     The shut leaves of man's life, round the germ of his power
     Yet folded, his life had been earnest.  Alas!
     In that life one occasion, one moment, there was
     When this earnestness might, with the life-sap of youth,
     Lusty fruitage have borne in his manhood's full growth;
     But it found him too soon, when his nature was still
     The delicate toy of too pliant a will,
     The boisterous wind of the world to resist,
     Or the frost of the world's wintry wisdom.
                                                He miss'd
     That occasion, too rathe in its advent.
                                              Since then,
     He had made it a law, in his commerce with men,
     That intensity in him, which only left sore
     The heart it disturb'd, to repel and ignore.
     And thus, as some Prince by his subjects deposed,
     Whose strength he, by seeking to crush it, disclosed,
     In resigning the power he lack'd power to support
     Turns his back upon courts, with a sneer at the court,
     In his converse this man for self-comfort appeal'd
     To a cynic denial of all he conceal'd
     In the instincts and feelings belied by his words.
     Words, however, are things: and the man who accords
     To his language the license to outrage his soul,
     Is controll'd by the words he disdains to control.
     And, therefore, he seem'd in the deeds of each day
     The light code proclaim'd on his lips to obey;
     And, the slave of each whim, follow'd wilfully aught
     That perchance fool'd the fancy, or flatter'd the thought.
     Yet, indeed, deep within him, the spirits of truth,
     Vast, vague aspirations, the powers of his youth,
     Lived and breathed, and made moan—stirr'd themselves—strove to start
     Into deeds—though deposed, in that Hades, his heart.
     Like those antique Theogonies ruin'd and hurl'd,
     Under clefts of the hills, which, convulsing the world,
     Heaved, in earthquake, their heads the rent caverns above,
     To trouble at times in the light court of Jove
     All its frivolous gods, with an undefined awe,
     Of wrong'd rebel powers that own'd not their law.
     For his sake, I am fain to believe that, if born
     To some lowlier rank (from the world's languid scorn
     Secured by the world's stern resistance) where strife,
     Strife and toil, and not pleasure, gave purpose to life,
     He possibly might have contrived to attain
     Not eminence only, but worth.  So, again,
     Had he been of his own house the first-born, each gift
     Of a mind many-gifted had gone to uplift
     A great name by a name's greatest uses.
                                             But there
     He stood isolated, opposed, as it were,
     To life's great realities; part of no plan;
     And if ever a nobler and happier man
     He might hope to become, that alone could be when
     With all that is real in life and in men
     What was real in him should have been reconciled;
     When each influence now from experience exiled
     Should have seized on his being, combined with his nature,
     And form'd as by fusion, a new human creature:
     As when those airy elements viewless to sight
     (The amalgam of which, if our science be right,
     The germ of this populous planet doth fold)
     Unite in the glass of the chemist, behold!
     Where a void seem'd before, there a substance appears,
     From the fusion of forces whence issued the spheres!
     VII.
     But the permanent cause why his life fail'd and miss'd
     The full value of life was,—where man should resist
     The world, which man's genius is call'd to command,
     He gave way, less from lack of the power to withstand,
     Than from lack of the resolute will to retain
     Those strongholds of life which the world strives to gain.
     Let this character go in the old-fashion'd way,
     With the moral thereof tightly tack'd to it.  Say—
     "Let any man once show the world that he feels
     Afraid of its bark, and 'twill fly at his heels:
     Let him fearlessly face it, 'twill leave him alone:
     But 'twill fawn at his feet if he flings it a bone."
     VIII.
     The moon of September, now half at the full,
     Was unfolding from darkness and dreamland the lull
     Of the quiet blue air, where the many-faced hills
     Watch'd, well-pleased, their fair slaves, the light, foam-footed rills,
     Dance and sing down the steep marble stairs of their courts,
     And gracefully fashion a thousand sweet sports,
     Lord Alfred (by this on his journeying far)
     Was pensively puffing his Lopez cigar,
     And brokenly humming an old opera strain,
     And thinking, perchance, of those castles in Spain
     Which that long rocky barrier hid from his sight;
     When suddenly, out of the neighboring night,
     A horseman emerged from a fold of the hill,
     And so startled his steed that was winding at will
     Up the thin dizzy strip of a pathway which led
     O'er the mountain—the reins on its neck, and its head
     Hanging lazily forward—that, but for a hand
     Light and ready, yet firm, in familiar command,
     Both rider and horse might have been in a trice
     Hurl'd horribly over the grim precipice.
     IX.
     As soon as the moment's alarm had subsided,
     And the oath with which nothing can find unprovided
     A thoroughbred Englishman, safely exploded,
     Lord Alfred unbent (as Apollo his bow did
     Now and then) his erectness; and looking, not ruder
     Than such inroad would warrant, survey'd the intruder,
     Whose arrival so nearly cut short in his glory
     My hero, and finished abruptly this story.
     X.
     The stranger, a man of his own age or less,
     Well mounted, and simple though rich in his dress,
     Wore his beard and mustache in the fashion of France.
     His face, which was pale, gather'd force from the glance
     Of a pair of dark, vivid, and eloquent eyes.
     With a gest of apology, touch'd with surprise,
     He lifted his hat, bow'd and courteously made
     Some excuse in such well-cadenced French as betray'd,
     At the first word he spoke, the Parisian.
     XI.
                                                I swear
     I have wander'd about in the world everywhere;
     From many strange mouths have heard many strange tongues;
     Strain'd with many strange idioms my lips and my lungs;
     Walk'd in many a far land, regretting my own;
     In many a language groaned many a groan;
     And have often had reason to curse those wild fellows
     Who built the high house at which Heaven turn'd jealous,
     Making human audacity stumble and stammer
     When seized by the throat in the hard gripe of Grammar.
     But the language of languages dearest to me
     Is that in which once, O ma toute cherie,
     When, together, we bent o'er your nosegay for hours,
     You explain'd what was silently said by the flowers,
     And, selecting the sweetest of all, sent a flame
     Through my heart, as, in laughing, you murmur'd
                      Je t'aime.
     XII.
     The Italians have voices like peacocks; the Spanish
     Smell, I fancy, of garlic; the Swedish and Danish
     Have something too Runic, too rough and unshod, in
     Their accents for mouths not descended from Odin;
     German gives me a cold in the head, sets me wheezing
     And coughing; and Russian is nothing but sneezing;
     But, by Belus and Babel!  I never have heard,
     And I never shall hear (I well know it), one word
     Of that delicate idiom of Paris without
     Feeling morally sure, beyond question or doubt,
     By the wild way in which my heart inwardly flutter'd
     That my heart's native tongue to my heart had been utter'd
     And whene'er I hear French spoken as I approve
     I feel myself quietly falling in love.
     XIII.
     Lord Alfred, on hearing the stranger, appeased
     By a something, an accent, a cadence, which pleased
     His ear with that pledge of good breeding which tells
     At once of the world in whose fellowship dwells
     The speaker that owns it, was glad to remark
     In the horseman a man one might meet after dark
     Without fear.
                  And thus, not disagreeably impress'd,
     As it seem'd, with each other, the two men abreast
     Rode on slowly a moment.
     XIV.
     STRANGER.

                              I see, Sir, you are
     A smoker.  Allow me!

     ALFRED.

                           Pray take a cigar.

     STRANGER.

     Many thanks!...  Such cigars are a luxury here.
     Do you go to Luchon?

     ALFRED.

                          Yes; and you?

     STRANGER.

                                        Yes.  I fear,
     Since our road is the same, that our journey must be
     Somewhat closer than is our acquaintance.  You see
     How narrow the path is.  I'm tempted to ask
     Your permission to finish (no difficult task!)
     The cigar you have given me (really a prize!)
     In your company.

     ALFRED.

                     Charm'd, Sir, to find your road lies
     In the way of my own inclinations!  Indeed
     The dream of your nation I find in this weed.
     In the distant Savannahs a talisman grows
     That makes all men brothers that use it... who knows?
     That blaze which erewhile from the Boulevart out-broke,
     It has ended where wisdom begins, Sir,—in smoke.
     Messieurs Lopez (whatever your publicists write)
     Have done more in their way human kind to unite,
     Perchance, than ten Prudhons.

     STRANGER.

                                  Yes.  Ah, what a scene!

     ALFRED.

     Humph!  Nature is here too pretentious.  Her mien
     Is too haughty.  One likes to be coax'd, not compell'd,
     To the notice such beauty resents if withheld.
     She seems to be saying too plainly, "Admire me!"
     And I answer, "Yes, madam, I do: but you tire me."

     STRANGER.

     That sunset, just now though...

     ALFRED.

                                     A very old trick!
     One would think that the sun by this time must be sick
     Of blushing at what, by this time, he must know
     Too well to be shocked by—this world.

     STRANGER.

                                             Ah, 'tis so
     With us all.  'Tis the sinner that best knew the world
     At Twenty, whose lip is, at sixty, most curl'd
     With disdain of its follies.  You stay at Luchon?

     ALFRED.

     A day or two only.

     STRANGER.

                         The season is done.
     ALFRED.

     Already?

     STRANGER.

              'Twas shorter this year than the last.
     Folly soon wears her shoes out.  She dances so fast
     We are all of us tired.

     ALFRED.

                             You know the place well?

     STRANGER.

     I have been there two seasons.

     ALFRED.

                                    Pray who is the Belle
     Of the Baths at this moment?

     STRANGER.

                                 The same who has been
     The belle of all places in which she is seen;
     The belle of all Paris last winter; last spring
     The belle of all Baden.

     ALFRED.

                              An uncommon thing!

     STRANGER.

     Sir, an uncommon beauty!... I rather should say
     An uncommon character.  Truly, each day
     One meets women whose beauty is equal to hers,
     But none with the charm of Lucile de Nevers.

     ALFRED.

     Madame de Nevers!

     STRANGER.

                       Do you know her?

     ALFRED.

                                         I know
     Or, rather, I knew her—a long time ago.
     I almost forget...

     STRANGER.

                           What a wit! what a grace
     In her language! her movements! what play in her face!
     And yet what a sadness she seems to conceal!

     ALFRED.

     You speak like a lover.

     STRANGER.

                              I speak as I feel,
     But not like a lover.  What interests me so
     In Lucile, at the same time forbids me, I know,
     To give to that interest, whate'er the sensation,
     The name we men give to an hour's admiration,
     A night's passing passion, an actress's eyes,
     A dancing girl's ankles, a fine lady's sighs.

     ALFRED.

     Yes, I quite comprehend.  But this sadness—this shade
     Which you speak of?... it almost would make me afraid
     Your gay countrymen, Sir, less adroit must have grown,
     Since when, as a stripling, at Paris, I own
     I found in them terrible rivals,—if yet
     They have all lack'd the skill to console this regret
     (If regret be the word I should use), or fulfil
     This desire (if desire be the word), which seems still
     To endure unappeased.  For I take it for granted,
     From all that you say, that the will was not wanted.
     XV.
     The stranger replied, not without irritation:
     "I have heard that an Englishman—one of your nation
     I presume—and if so, I must beg you, indeed,
     To excuse the contempt which I..."

     ALFRED.

                                          Pray, Sir, proceed
     With your tale.  My compatriot, what was his crime?

     STRANGER.

     Oh, nothing!  His folly was not so sublime
     As to merit that term.  If I blamed him just now,
     It was not for the sin, but the silliness.

     ALFRED.

                                                How?

     STRANGER.

     I own I hate Botany.  Still,... admit,
     Although I myself have no passion for it,
     And do not understand, yet I cannot despise
     The cold man of science, who walks with his eyes
     All alert through a garden of flowers, and strips
     The lilies' gold tongues, and the roses' red lips,
     With a ruthless dissection; since he, I suppose,
     Has some purpose beyond the mere mischief he does.
     But the stupid and mischievous boy, that uproots
     The exotics, and tramples the tender young shoots,
     For a boy's brutal pastime, and only because
     He knows no distinction 'twixt heartsease and haws,—
     One would wish, for the sake of each nursling so nipp'd,
     To catch the young rascal and have him well whipp'd!

     ALFRED.

     Some compatriot of mine, do I then understand,
     With a cold Northern heart, and a rude English hand,
     Has injured your Rosebud of France?

     STRANGER.

                                         Sir, I know
     But little, or nothing.  Yet some faces show
     The last act of a tragedy in their regard:
     Though the first scenes be wanting, it yet is not hard
     To divine, more or less, what the plot may have been,
     And what sort of actors have pass'd o'er the scene.
     And whenever I gaze on the face of Lucile,
     With its pensive and passionless languor, I feel
     That some feeling hath burnt there... burnt out, and burnt up
     Health and hope.  So you feel when you gaze down the cup
     Of extinguish'd volcanoes: you judge of the fire
     Once there, by the ravage you see;—the desire,
     By the apathy left in its wake, and that sense
     Of a moral, immovable, mute impotence.

     ALFRED.

     Humph!... I see you have finished, at last, your cigar;
     Can I offer another?

     STRANGER.

                          No, thank you.  We are
     Not two miles from Luchon.

     ALFRED.

                                You know the road well?

     STRANGER.

     I have often been over it.
     XVI.
                                Here a pause fell
     On their converse.  Still musingly on, side by side,
     In the moonlight, the two men continued to ride
     Down the dim mountain pathway.  But each for the rest
     Of their journey, although they still rode on abreast,
     Continued to follow in silence the train
     Of the different feelings that haunted his brain;
     And each, as though roused from a deep revery,
     Almost shouted, descending the mountain, to see
     Burst at once on the moonlight the silvery Baths,
     The long lime-tree alley, the dark gleaming paths,
     With the lamps twinkling through them—the quaint wooden roofs—
     The little white houses.
                               The clatter of hoofs,
     And the music of wandering bands, up the walls
     Of the steep hanging hill, at remote intervals
     Reached them, cross'd by the sound of the clacking of whips,
     And here and there, faintly, through serpentine slips
     Of verdant rose-gardens deep-sheltered with screens
     Of airy acacias and dark evergreens,
     They could mark the white dresses and catch the light songs
     Of the lovely Parisians that wander'd in throngs,
     Led by Laughter and Love through the old eventide
     Down the dream-haunted valley, or up the hillside.
     XVII.
     At length, at the door of the inn l'HERISSON,
     Pray go there, if ever you go to Luchon!
     The two horsemen, well pleased to have reached it, alighted
     And exchanged their last greetings.
                                         The Frenchman invited
     Lord Alfred to dinner.  Lord Alfred declined.
     He had letters to write, and felt tired.  So he dined
     In his own rooms that night.
                                  With an unquiet eye
     He watched his companion depart; nor knew why,
     Beyond all accountable reason or measure,
     He felt in his breast such a sovran displeasure.
     "The fellow's good looking," he murmur'd at last,
     "And yet not a coxcomb."  Some ghost of the past
     Vex'd him still.
                      "If he love her," he thought, "let him win her."
     Then he turn'd to the future—and order'd his dinner.
     XVIII.
     O hour of all hours, the most bless'd upon earth,
     Blessed hour of our dinners!
                                  The land of his birth;
     The face of his first love; the bills that he owes;
     The twaddle of friends and the venom of foes;
     The sermon he heard when to church he last went;
     The money he borrow'd, the money he spent;—
     All of these things, a man, I believe, may forget,
     And not be the worse for forgetting; but yet
     Never, never, oh never! earth's luckiest sinner
     Hath unpunish'd forgotten the hour of his dinner!
     Indigestion, that conscience of every bad stomach,
     Shall relentlessly gnaw and pursue him with some ache
     Or some pain; and trouble, remorseless, his best ease,
     As the Furies once troubled the sleep of Orestes.
     XIX.
     We may live without poetry, music, and art:
     We may live without conscience, and live without heart;
     We may live without friends; we may live without books;
     But civilized man cannot live without cooks.
     He may live without books,—what is knowledge but grieving?
     He may live without hope,—what is hope but deceiving?
     He may live without love,—what is passion but pining?
     But where is the man that can live without dining?
     XX.
     Lord Alfred found, waiting his coming, a note
     From Lucile.
                  "Your last letter has reach'd me," she wrote.
     "This evening, alas! I must go to the ball,
     And shall not be at home till too late for your call;
     But to-morrow, at any rate, sans faute, at One
     You will find me at home, and will find me alone.
     Meanwhile, let me thank you sincerely, milord,
     For the honor with which you adhere to your word.
     Yes, I thank you, Lord Alfred!  To-morrow then.
                                                     "L."

     XXI.
     I find myself terribly puzzled to tell
     The feelings with which Alfred Vargrave flung down
     This note, as he pour'd out his wine.  I must own
     That I think he, himself, could have hardly explain'd
     Those feelings exactly.
                             "Yes, yes," as he drain'd
     The glass down, he mutter'd, "Jack's right, after all.
     The coquette!"
                    "Does milord mean to go to the ball?"
     Ask'd the waiter, who linger'd.
                                     "Perhaps.  I don't know.
     You may keep me a ticket, in case I should go."
     XXII.
     Oh, better, no doubt, is a dinner of herbs,
     When season'd by love, which no rancor disturbs,
     And sweeten'd by all that is sweetest in life,
     Than turbot, bisque, ortolans, eaten in strife!
     But if, out of humor, and hungry, alone,
     A man should sit down to a dinner, each one
     Of the dishes of which the cook chooses to spoil
     With a horrible mixture of garlic and oil,
     The chances are ten against one, I must own,
     He gets up as ill-temper'd as when he sat down.
     And if any reader this fact to dispute is
     Disposed, I say... "Allium edat cicutis
     Nocentius!"
                  Over the fruit and the wine
     Undisturb'd the wasp settled.  The evening was fine.
     Lord Alfred his chair by the window had set,
     And languidly lighted his small cigarette.
     The window was open.  The warm air without
     Waved the flame of the candles.  The moths were about.
     In the gloom he sat gloomy.
     XXIII.
                                 Gay sounds from below
     Floated up like faint echoes of joys long ago,
     And night deepen'd apace; through the dark avenues
     The lamps twinkled bright; and by threes and by twos,
     The idlers of Luchon were strolling at will,
     As Lord Alfred could see from the cool window-sill,
     Where his gaze, as he languidly turn'd it, fell o'er
     His late travelling companion, now passing before
     The inn, at the window of which he still sat,
     In full toilet,—boots varnish'd, and snowy cravat,
     Gayly smoothing and buttoning a yellow kid glove,
     As he turned down the avenue.
                                   Watching above,
     From his window, the stranger, who stopp'd as he walk'd
     To mix with those groups, and now nodded, now talk'd,
     To the young Paris dandies, Lord Alfred discern'd,
     By the way hats were lifted, and glances were turn'd,
     That this unknown acquaintance, now bound for the hall,
     Was a person of rank or of fashion; for all
     Whom he bow'd to in passing, or stopped with and chatter'd,
     Walk'd on with a look which implied... "I feel flatter'd!"
     XXIV.
     His form was soon lost in the distance and gloom.
     XXV.
     Lord Alfred still sat by himself in his room.
     He had finish'd, one after the other, a dozen
     Or more cigarettes.  He had thought of his cousin;
     He had thought of Matilda, and thought of Lucile:
     He had thought about many things; thought a great deal
     Of himself, of his past life, his future, his present:
     He had thought of the moon, neither full moon nor crescent;
     Of the gay world, so sad! life, so sweet and so sour!
     He had thought, too, of glory, and fortune, and power:
     Thought of love, and the country, and sympathy, and
     A poet's asylum in some distant land:
     Thought of man in the abstract, and woman, no doubt,
     In particular; also he had thought much about
     His digestion, his debts, and his dinner: and last,
     He thought that the night would be stupidly pass'd
     If he thought any more of such matters at all:
     So he rose and resolved to set out for the ball.
     XXVI.
     I believe, ere he finish'd his tardy toilet,
     That Lord Alfred had spoil'd, and flung by in a pet,
     Half a dozen white neckcloths, and look'd for the nonce
     Twenty times in the glass, if he look'd in it once.
     I believe that he split up, in drawing them on,
     Three pair of pale lavender gloves, one by one.
     And this is the reason, no doubt, that at last,
     When he reach'd the Casino, although he walk'd fast,
     He heard, as he hurriedly enter'd the door,
     The church clock strike Twelve.
     XXVII.
                                     The last waltz was just o'er.
     The chaperons and dancers were all in a flutter.
     A crowd block'd the door: and a buzz and a mutter
     Went about in the room as a young man, whose face
     Lord Alfred had seen ere he enter'd that place,
     But a few hours ago, through the perfumed and warm
     Flowery porch, with a lady that lean'd on his arm
     Like a queen in a fable of old fairy days,
     Left the ballroom.
     XXVIII.
                       The hubbub of comment and praise
     Reach'd Lord Alfred as just then he enter'd.
                                                 "Ma foi!"
     Said a Frenchman beside him,... "That lucky Luvois
     Has obtained all the gifts of the gods... rank and wealth,
     And good looks, and then such inexhaustible health!
     He that hath shall have more; and this truth, I surmise,
     Is the cause why, to-night, by the beautiful eyes
     Of la charmante Lucile more distinguish'd than all,
     He so gayly goes off with the belle of the ball."
     "Is it true," asked a lady aggressively fat,
     Who, fierce as a female Leviathan, sat
     By another that look'd like a needle, all steel
     And tenuity—"Luvois will marry Lucile?"
     The needle seem'd jerk'd by a virulent twitch,
     As though it were bent upon driving a stitch
     Through somebody's character.
                                   "Madam," replied,
     Interposing, a young man who sat by their side,
     And was languidly fanning his face with his hat,
     "I am ready to bet my new Tilbury that,
     If Luvois has proposed, the Comtesse has refused."
     The fat and thin ladies were highly amused.
     "Refused!... what! a young Duke, not thirty, my dear,
     With at least half a million (what is it?) a year!"
     "That may be," said a third; "yet I know some time since
     Castelmar was refused, though as rich, and a Prince.
     But Luvois, who was never before in his life
     In love with a woman who was not a wife,
     Is now certainly serious."
     XXIX.
                                The music once more
     Recommenced.
     XXX.
                  Said Lord Alfred, "This ball is a bore!"
     And return'd to the inn, somewhat worse than before.
     XXXI.
     There, whilst musing he lean'd the dark valley above,
     Through the warm land were wand'ring the spirits of love.
     A soft breeze in the white window drapery stirr'd;
     In the blossom'd acacia the lone cricket chirr'd;
     The scent of the roses fell faint o'er the night,
     And the moon on the mountain was dreaming in light.
     Repose, and yet rapture! that pensive wild nature
     Impregnate with passion in each breathing feature!
     A stone's throw from thence, through the large lime-trees peep'd
     In a garden of roses, a white chalet, steep'd
     In the moonbeams.  The windows oped down to the lawn;
     The casements were open; the curtains were drawn;
     Lights stream'd from the inside; and with them the sound
     Of music and song.  In the garden, around
     A table with fruits, wine, tea, ices, there set,
     Half a dozen young men and young women were met.
     Light, laughter, and voices, and music all stream'd
     Through the quiet-leaved limes.  At the window there seem'd
     For one moment the outline, familiar and fair,
     Of a white dress, white neck, and soft dusky hair,
     Which Lord Alfred remember'd... a moment or so
     It hover'd, then pass'd into shadow; and slow
     The soft notes, from a tender piano upflung,
     Floated forth, and a voice unforgotten thus sung:—
     "Hear a song that was born in the land of my birth!
        The anchors are lifted, the fair ship is free,
     And the shout of the mariners floats in its mirth
        'Twixt the light in the sky and the light on the sea.

     "And this ship is a world.  She is freighted with souls,
        She is freighted with merchandise: proudly she sails
     With the Labor that stores, and the Will that controls
        The gold in the ingots, the silk in the bales.

     "From the gardens of Pleasure where reddens the rose,
        And the scent of the cedar is faint on the air,
     Past the harbors of Traffic, sublimely she goes,
        Man's hopes o'er the world of the waters to bear!

     "Where the cheer from the harbors of Traffic is heard,
        Where the gardens of Pleasure fade fast on the sight,
     O'er the rose, o'er the cedar, there passes a bird;
        'Tis the Paradise Bird, never known to alight.

     "And that bird, bright and bold as a poet's desire,
        Roams her own native heavens, the realms of her birth.
     There she soars like a seraph, she shines like a fire,
        And her plumage hath never been sullied by earth.

     "And the mariners greet her; there's song on each lip,
        For that bird of good omen, and joy in each eye.
     And the ship and the bird, and the bird and the ship,
        Together go forth over ocean and sky.

     "Fast, fast fades the land! far the rose-gardens flee,
        And far fleet the harbors.  In regions unknown
     The ship is alone on a desert of sea,
        And the bird in a desert of sky is alone.

     "In those regions unknown, o'er that desert of air,
        Down that desert of waters—tremendous in wrath—
     The storm-wind Euroclydon leaps from his lair,
        And cleaves, thro' the waves of the ocean, his path.

     "And the bird in the cloud, and the ship on the wave,
        Overtaken, are beaten about by wild gales;
     And the mariners all rush their cargo to save,
        Of the gold in the ingots, the silk in the bales.

     "Lo! a wonder, which never before hath been heard,
        For it never before hath been given to sight;
     On the ship bath descended the Paradise Bird,
        The Paradise Bird, never known to alight!

     "The bird which the mariners bless'd, when each lip
        Had a song for the omen that gladden'd each eye;
     The bright bird for shelter hath flown to the ship
        From the wrath on the sea and the wrath in the sky.

     "But the mariners heed not the bird any more.
        They are felling the masts—they are cutting the sails;
     Some are working, some weeping, and some wrangling o'er
        Their gold in the ingots, their silk in the bales.

     "Souls of men are on board; wealth of man in the hold;
        And the storm-wind Euroclydon sweeps to his prey;
     And who heeds the bird?  'Save the silk and the gold!'
        And the bird from her shelter the gust sweeps away!

     "Poor Paradise Bird! on her lone flight once more
        Back again in the wake of the wind she is driven—
     To be 'whelmed in the storm, or above it to soar,
        And, if rescued from ocean, to vanish in heaven!

     "And the ship rides the waters and weathers the gales:
        From the haven she nears the rejoicing is heard.
     All hands are at work on the ingots, the bales,
        Save a child sitting lonely, who misses—the bird!"

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