Page:Harper's New Monthly Magazine - v109.djvu/924

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HARPER'S MONTHLY MAGAZINE.
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cied Marie as enthusiastically as Gertrude had known he would not fancy the delicate boy. With the little girl's help she lifted him by degrees, a dead weight, from the depths of self-depreciation—which Mrs. Darcy actually refrained from proclaiming by its opposite name.

One evening, after he had watched her put the little folks to bed, he broke out with: "Have you ever thought that the essence of Christianity is motherhood, unsexed, impersonated,—love, service, self-abnegation, vicarious suffering? You are the personification of Christianity, Gertrude. Women like you explain the deification of Mary."

"Why, Ned!" Tenderness, faintly touched with amusement, warm with sympathy; and gratitude, as fresh and eager as the girl's.

"I believe there is some such esoteric explanation of the persistence in Christianity of the idea of the motherhood of God.—The Motherhood of God! There, that shall be the title-poem of my next volume, dedicated openly to you. You are a living sonnet, dear." The Ned she knew—look, intonation, manner, different just for her! Each positively beautiful—to the other; and as the vehicle, the expression of love. "I wish I could express things in my language as well as you do in yours. You have the ideal always in yourself. But I have to create, seek it," he hesitated, wistfully, beginning to droop again, "often led astray by wandering fires."

The amende honorable was made; Gertrude's quick hand hurried to accept it and dismiss the dangerous subject forever.


The Faithful Rose-Tree

BY CHARLES DALMON

"So long as I do not hold in my arms thy fair body, the rose-tree of my heart's desire will not flower."—Hafiz.

ENCHANTMENTS of the nightingale
Shall not avail
To make my lonely breast disclose
Another rose
Until I hear my lover's voice
Calling upon me to rejoice.

My brothers and my sisters stand
On either hand
Revealing unto sun and shower
Flower after flower;
But I all blandishments disdain,
Knowing my faith is not in vain.

The zephyrs have a gentle way
By night and day
About the garden, but my heart
Shall not impart
One single rose before I hear
My lover's footsteps coming near.

Who is my lover! unto you
I answer, who?
Nor shall you know my secret when
He cometh; then
You shall but see my breast disclose
Rose after rose, rose, after rose.