THE SECOND TIME THEY MET.

“Oh, would I might see my love,” sang he,

As he dreamed in his true heart of her,

As he rode that day up the highway wide,

With his feathers gay, and the lute at his side;

“Oh, would I might see my love,” sang he,

“My love that knows not I love her.”

“Oh, would I might see my love,” sang she,

As she sat in the porch above him,

With the web half-spun in her fingers fair,

And a ray of the sun in her brown, brown hair;

“Oh, would I might see my love,” sang she,

“My love that knows not I love him.”

Then as their eyes met, with a start I forget

Whether shame, or delight, or sorrow,

The sky in its glow seemed to interest her,

And he bent very low to fasten his spur;

But “Oh, would I might see my love,”—dear me!

They sang it no more till the morrow.


ON NOT READING A POSTHUMOUS WORK.[E]

They stirred the carven agate door

Back from the cloisters, where of yore

One toiled by night, and toiling, kept

The starlight on his bended head:

“O enter with us, straight and free,

The master’s place of mystery;

Had he not gone beyond the sea,

He would have bid us come,” they said.

But from the threshold hushed and gray

The loiterer turned, and made his way

From arch to arch, and answered low,

Pale with some ever-deepening dread:

“What he once promised to unfold,

Without him, how shall I behold?

O enter you whose hearts are bold;

My heart hath failed me here,” he said.

Thou dead magician, be it so!

I close thy pages, and forego

The beauty other men may scan

With much of awe and tenderness;

And if this blessing half-divine,

With gracious sorrow I resign

To faith that firmer is than mine,

Thou knowest if I love thee less!