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قراءة كتاب The Victories of Love, and Other Poems

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The Victories of Love, and Other Poems

The Victories of Love, and Other Poems

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 8

will Honoria say?
She thought so highly of him.  Pray
Tell it her gently.  I’ve no right,
I know you hold, to trust my sight;
But Frederick’s state could not be hid!
Awl Felix, coming when he did,
Was lucky; for Honoria, too,
Was half in love.  How warm she grew
On ‘worldliness,’ when once I said
I fancied that, in ladies, Fred
Had tastes much better than his means!
His hand was worthy of a Queen’s,
Said she, and actually shed tears
The night he left us for two years,
And sobb’d, when ask’d the cause to tell,
That ‘Frederick look’d so miserable.’
He did look very dull, no doubt,
But such things girls don’t cry about.
   What weathercocks men always prove!
You’re quite right not to fall in love.
I never did, and, truth to tell,
I don’t think it respectable.
The man can’t understand it, too.
He likes to be in love with you,
But scarce knows how, if you love him,
Poor fellow.  When ’tis woman’s whim
To serve her husband night and day,
The kind soul lets her have her way!
So, if you wed, as soon you should,
Be selfish for your husband’s good.
Happy the men who relegate
Their pleasures, vanities, and state
To us.  Their nature seems to be
To enjoy themselves by deputy,
For, seeking their own benefit,
Dear, what a mess they make of it!
A man will work his bones away,
If but his wife will only play;
He does not mind how much he’s teased,
So that his plague looks always pleased;
And never thanks her, while he lives,
For anything, but what he gives!
’Tis hard to manage men, we hear!
Believe me, nothing’s easier, Dear.
The most important step by far
Is finding what their colours are.
The next is, not to let them know
The reason why they love us so.
The indolent droop of a blue shawl,
Or gray silk’s fluctuating fall,
Covers the multitude of sins
In me.  Your husband, Love, might wince
At azure, and be wild at slate,
And yet do well with chocolate.
Of course you’d let him fancy he
Adored you for your piety.

XIV.  FROM JANE TO HER MOTHER.

Dear Mother, as you write, I see
How glad and thankful I should be
For such a husband.  Yet to tell
The truth, I am so miserable!
How could he—I remember, though,
He never said me loved me!  No,
He is so right that all seems wrong
I’ve done and thought my whole life long!
I’m grown so dull and dead with fear
That Yes and No, when he is near,
Is all I have to say.  He’s quite
Unlike what most would call polite,
And yet, when first I saw him come
To tea in Aunt’s fine drawing-room,
He made me feel so common!  Oh,
How dreadful if he thinks me so!
It’s no use trying to behave
To him.  His eye, so kind and grave,
Sees through and through me!  Could not you,
Without his knowing that I knew,
Ask him to scold me now and then?
Mother, it’s such a weary strain
The way he has of treating me
As if ’twas something fine to be
A woman; and appearing not
To notice any faults I’ve got!
I know he knows I’m plain, and small,
Stupid and ignorant, and all
Awkward and mean; and, by degrees,
I see a beauty which he sees,
When often he looks strange awhile,
Then recollects me with a smile.
   I wish he had that fancied Wife,
With me for Maid, now! all my life
To dress her out for him, and make
Her looks the lovelier for his sake;
To have her rate me till I cried;
Then see her seated by his side,
And driven off proudly to the Ball;
Then to stay up for her, whilst all
The servants were asleep; and hear
At dawn the carriage rolling near,
And let them in; and hear her laugh,
And boast, he said that none was half
So beautiful, and that the Queen,
Who danced with him the first, had seen
And noticed her, and ask’d who was
That lady in the golden gauze?
And then to go to bed, and lie
In a sort of heavenly jealousy,
Until ’twas broad day, and I guess’d
She slept, nor knew how she was bless’d.
   Pray burn this letter.  I would not
Complain, but for the fear I’ve got
Of going wild, as we hear tell
Of people shut up in a cell,
With no one there to talk to.  He
Must never know he is loved by me
The most; he’d think himself to blame;
And I should almost die for shame.
   If being good would serve instead
Of being graceful, ah, then, Fred—
But I, myself, I never could
See what’s in women’s being good;
For all their goodness is to do
Just what their nature tells them to.
Now, when a man would do what’s right,
He has to try with all his might.
   Though true and kind in deed and word,
Fred’s not a vessel of the Lord.
But I have hopes of him; for, oh,
How can we ever surely know
But that the very darkest place
May be the scene of saving grace!

XV.  FROM FREDERICK.

‘How did I feel?’  The little wight
Fill’d me, unfatherly, with fright!
So grim it gazed, and, out of the sky,
There came, minute, remote, the cry,
Piercing, of original pain.
I put the wonder back to Jane,
And her delight seem’d dash’d, that I,
Of strangers still by nature shy,
Was not familiar quite so soon
With her small friend of many a moon.
But, when the new-made Mother smiled,
She seem’d herself a little child,
Dwelling at large beyond the law
By which, till then, I judged and saw;
And that fond glow which she felt stir
For it, suffused my heart for her;
To whom, from the weak babe, and thence
To me, an influent innocence,
Happy, reparative of life,
Came, and she was indeed my wife,
As there, lovely with love she lay,
Brightly contented all the day
To hug her sleepy little boy,
In the reciprocated joy
Of touch, the childish sense of love,
Ever inquisitive to prove
Its strange possession, and to know
If the eye’s report be really so.

XVI.  FROM JANE TO MRS. GRAHAM

Dear Mother,—such if you’ll allow,
In love, not law, I’ll call you now,—
I hope you’re well.  I write to say
Frederick has got, besides his pay,
A good appointment in the Docks;
Also to thank you for the frocks
And shoes for Baby.  I, (D.V.,)
Shall soon be strong.  Fred goes to sea
No more.  I am so glad; because,
Though kinder husband never was,
He seems still kinder to become
The more he stays with me at home.
When we are parted, I see plain
He’s dull till he gets used again
To marriage.  Do not tell him, though;
I would not have him know I know,
For all the world.
      I try to mind
All your advice; but sometimes find
I do not well see how.  I thought
To take it about dress; so bought
A gay new bonnet, gown, and shawl;
But Frederick was not pleased at all;
For, though he smiled, and said, ‘How smart!’
I feel, you know, what’s in his heart.
But I shall learn!  I fancied long
That care in dress was very wrong,
Till Frederick, in his startling way,
When I began to blame, one day,
The Admiral’s Wife, because we hear
She spends two hours, or something near,
In dressing, took her part, and said
How all things deck themselves that wed;
How birds and plants grow fine to please
Each other in their marriages;
And how (which certainly is true—
It never struck me—did it you?)
Dress was, at first, Heaven’s ordinance,
And has much Scripture countenance.
For Eliezer,

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