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A poem by Henry Timrod |
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Two Portraits |
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Title: Two Portraits Author: Henry Timrod [More Titles by Timrod] I You say, as one who shapes a life, And, laughing lightly, ask my aid This is the portrait; and I take The springtime of your soul is dead, The lines are firmer round your mouth, Your eyes, grown deeper, are not sad, And the old charm still lurks within Some share, perhaps, of youthful gloss The delicate ear are folded down Though here and there a thread of gray One might suppose your life had passed And such--for all that I foreknow-- A loveless heart is seldom stirred; But ah! through cares alone we reach In the white courts beyond the stars And they on earth who've wept the most Grant that your maiden life hath sped With rocks, and winds, and storms at truce, Yet are you happy? In your air And a faint shadow on your cheek You have had all a maid could hope The strength that cometh from above; And always at your soul's demand Small need your heart hath had to roam And yet upon your wish attends What, in a lot so sweet as this, And to what secret shall I trace And that sad look which now and then And dies reluctantly away At best, and after all, the place Hath much to try a woman's heart, The world around, with little ruth, And, right or wrong, the old maid rests And still is doomed to meet and bear These are indeed but petty things, But I acquit you of the shame For you are of such tempered clay And all that foes or fools could guide How then, O weary one! explain Alas! you have divined at length Which, with who knows what human good, Where, as amid a field of flowers, Ah! we would wish the world less fair, And Autumn came not with its fruit, So I remark without surprise From day to night and night to day, In this poor life we may not cross And the soul grows not to its height Not blind to all you might have been, Because with love you sometimes played, You feel that you must pass from earth And that within your heart are deeps That not the maiden, but the wife While such as you but sit and dream And doubtless sometimes, all unsought, Despite the struggles of your will, And then you cannot help but yearn As they are loved, and love, who live And in a transient clasp or kiss They who of every mortal joy Or, if woes come, in Sorrow's hour
II Here ends my feeble sketch of what And I foresee how oft these rhymes If I have read your nature right, And when that comes, as come it must, Nor yet on that which breaks to flame But on a heart which, even at rest, Where, settling soft, that spark shall creep Still stealing on with pace so slow Till after many and many a day, It shall attain the inmost shrine, I know not when or whence indeed But oh! once kindled, it will blaze, You will perceive, with subtler eyes, Which, with their animated chain Of green below, and blue above, You will perceive that in the breast Which, ere they feel a lover's breath, And till the heart is wooed and won
But now, stand forth as sweet as life! I note some changes in your face, Yet the calm forehead lightly bears And that one love which on this earth And to their height can lift and bind Hath not allowed a charm to fade-- An air of still, though bright repose All that a generous manhood may While the kind eyes betray no less, That you have learned the truths which lie Which, with its blisses and its woes, If now, as to the eyes of one Your soul lay open to my view, Could see no incompleted part, I cannot tell how many dead And you but look the more serene As you had gathered from the dust Your smile is even sweeter now And that which wakes this gentler charm Your voice was always soft in youth, But never were its tones so mild And when to soothe some little wrong The same strange sweetness which in years And (even when mirthful) gave always Falls, with perchance a deeper thrill, I cannot guess in what fair spot Nor can I name what manly breast I cannot tell if partial Fate But oh! whatever be your place, To which more plainly hath been lent [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |