PERDITA

She is beautiful yet, with her wondrous hair

And eyes that are stormy with fitful light,

The delicate hues of brow and cheek

Are unmarred all, rose-clear and bright;

That matchless frame yet holds at bay

The crouching bloodhounds, Remorse, Decay.

There is no fear in her great dark eyes—

No hope, no love, no care,

Stately and proud she looks around

With a fierce, defiant stare;

Wild words deform her reckless speech,

Her laugh has a sadness tears never reach.

Whom should she fear on earth? Can fate

One direr torment lend

To her few little years of glitter and gloom

With the sad old story to end,

When the spectres of Loneliness, Want, and Pain

Shall arise one night with Death in their train?

I see in a vision a woman like her

Trip down an orchard slope,

With rosy prattlers that shout a name

In tones of rapture and hope;

While the yeoman, gazing at children and wife,

Thanks God for the pride and joy of his life.

* * * * * *

Whose conscience is heavy with this dark guilt?

Who pays at the final day

For a wasted body, a murdered soul,

And how shall he answer, I say,

For her outlawed years, her early doom,

And despair—despair—beyond the tomb?