THE BOOK.——To D. M. R.


Dear, if this little book of thine and mine

Could bring me fame as glorious and rare

As that whose splendid laurels shine so fair

For Dorothea,——it were less divine

A gift than this most priceless love of thine.

Since, then, that came to me, why now despair

Of laurel? though I may not hope to wear

Laurel or myrtle as the precious sign

Of any proud desert. Yet if I might

Not find that love could keep its holy tryst

With fame, how quickly would I yield the bright

New dream, to keep my ring of amethyst:

The memory of that day when love first kissed

The fingers of this hand wherewith I write!

Ἀμέθυστος
TO THE CRITIC.


I know full well I cannot pour for you

The nectar of the gods;—no epic wine

Is this I bring, to tempt you with its fine

Poetic flavor, as of grapes that grew

In the young vineyards when the world was new,

And only poets wrote;—a slender vine

You scarce will care for, bore these grapes of mine,

From which frail hands have crushed the purple dew.

Yet if from what I bring you, there is missed

The lyric loveliness of some who write,

The passionate fervor and the keen delight

Of eloquent fire in some to whom you list,—

Think it may be, not that the gift is slight,

But that my cup is rimmed with amethyst!

NARCISSUS.
TO THE READER.


If haply in these pages you should read

Aught that seems true to human nature, true

To heavenly instincts;—if they speak to you

Of love, of sorrow, faith without a creed,

Of doubt, of hope, of longing,—or indeed

Of any pain or joy the poet knew

A heart could feel,—think not to find a clue

To his own heart—its gladness or its need.

From a deep spring with tangled weeds o’ergrown

The poet parts the leaves; if they who pass,

Bending to look down through the tall wild grass,

By winds of heaven faintly overblown,

Should start to see there, dimly in a glass,

Some face,——’tis not the poet’s, but their own!