Page:Papers on Literature and Art (Fuller).djvu/47

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THE TWO HERBERTS.
31

George H.—I will say nothing, but leave you to time and the care of a greater than I. We have exchanged our verse, let us now change our subject too, and walk homeward; for I trust you, this night, intend to make my roof happy in your presence, and the sun is sinking.

Lord H.—Yes, you know I am there to be introduced to my new sister, whom I hope to love, and win from her a sisterly regard in turn.

George H.—You, none can fail to regard; and for her, even as you love me, you must her, for we are one.

Lord H.—(smiling)—Indeed; two years wed, and say that.

George H.—Will your lordship doubt it? From your muse I took my first lesson.

******

 With a look, it seem’d denied
  All earthly powers but hers, yet so
As if to her breath he did owe
 This borrow’d life, he thus replied—
 
 And shall our love, so far beyond
  That low and dying appetite,
And which so chaste desires unite,
 Not hold in an eternal bond?
 
 O no, belov’d! I am most sure
  Those virtuous habits we acquire,
As being with the soul entire,
 Must with it evermore endure.
 
 Else should our souls in vain elect;
  And vainer yet were heaven’s laws
When to an everlasting cause
 They gave a perishing effect.

Lord H.—(sighing)—You recall a happy season, when my thoughts were as delicate of hue, and of as heavenly a perfume as the flowers of May.