Page:Littell's Living Age - Volume 137.pdf/13

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2
HMY WIFE, ETC.


MY WIFE.

My little wife is out beyond the burn,
I see her parasol behind the fir,
And here am I inditing verse to her
Ere she return.

That pretty bird is happy there conceal'd,
This fragrant chamber smiles a peaceful smile, —
What joy to sing the joys of home — the while
My joy's afield!

My spouse is mild — she's meek as any nun,
And yet her spiritual calm is such …
Somehow one's always feeling she is much
Too good for one.

She thinks I'm wise and handsome — 'tis her creed.
I wonder am I either! On my word
Sometimes I've wonder'd "an my bonnie bird"
Think so indeed:

Perhaps! for she my homage ne'er repels;
Perhaps I might have loved her half a life,
Perhaps — had she but been the little wife
Of some one else.

But why should I complain of cross or cares?
While entertaining her (who won't complain)
It may be I an angel entertain
— And unawares.

Cornhill Magazine.Frederick Locker.




IN PALL MALL.

What do I see? — that face so fair,
My friend of years too bright to last,
Living again in beauty rare
As yonder omnibus went past.

Amid surroundings rude and low,
:Stood out the gem-like profile clear;
The mouth carved like a perfect bow,
The auburn curls that were so dear.

Can there be two with such a face?
:The other, which I thought unique,
Lies 'neath the ivy's sheltering grace,
Since many a year and month and week.

Say shall I follow? Shall I try
To leave my death-in-life and live?
The picture lost, alas! I cry—
Some joy may not the copy give?

Nay, while so much of good and great
Is round thy path and at thy side,
Force not the hands of wiser fate
To give the joy supreme denied.

Yet am I thankful for the glance
Vouchsafed me at thy face divine;
That for one moment sweet of trance,
I lived the life that once was mine.

Adieu — thou fadest as a dream;
The work-day world is hack once more:
Gone is that sudden rosy gleam,
And — here's the Athenæum door.

Macmillan's Magazine.




LONG AGO.

He gave me his promise of changeless truth,
(Down in the wood where the ivy clings);
And the air breathed rapture, and love, and youth,
(And yon tree was in bud where the throstle sings).

He said he was going across the sea,
(Far from the wood where the ivy clings),
And would bring back riches and jewels for me
(But brown leaves shake where the throstle sings).

Hope made life like a summer morn;
(Sweet was the wood where the ivy clings);
Now my heart is cold, and withered, and worn,
(And the bough is bare where the throstle sings).

Days are dreary, and life is long;
(Yet down in the wood the ivy clings),
And the winds they moan a desolate song,
(And there's snow on the bough where no throstle sings).

Spring will come with its buds and leaves
(Back to the wood where the ivy clings);
But 'tis winter cold for the heart that grieves,
(And I hear not the song that the throstle sings).

Chambers' Journal.J. C. H..




I LOVE THEE.

I Love thee; why, I cannot tell.
A thousand nameless winning ways
Around thee weave their magic spell,
And make words poor to speak thy praise.

I love thee; not because thine eyes
Are matched by heaven's celestial blue,
But in thy trustful look there lies
Th' unspoken promise to be true.

I love thee for some subtle charm
That seems to draw my heart to thine;
Thy voice and look my fears disarm,
And tell me thou art only mine.

I love thee; not for wealth or fame —
No worldly wish holds thought of thee;
And since thy heart reveals the same,
How bright with hope our lives may be!

Tinsley's Magazine. M. A. Baines.