Page:Hemans in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine 31 1832.pdf/10



FRANCESCO. Yes! The unseen land Of glorious visions hath sent forth a voice To call me hence. Oh! Be thou not deceived! Bind to thy heart no earthly hope, Teresa! I must, must leave thee! Yet be strong, my love, As thou hast still been gentle!

TERESA, Oh, Francesco! What will this dim world be to me, Francesco, When wanting thy bright soul, the life of all— My only sunshine!—How can I bear on? How can we part? We that have loved so well, With clasping spirits link'd so long by grief— By tears—by prayer?

FRANCESCO. Ev’n therefore we can part, With an immortal trust, that such high love Is not of things to perish. Let me leave One record still, to prove it strong as death, Ev’n in Death's hour of triumph. Once again, Stand with thy meek hands folded on thy breast, And eyes half veil'd, in thine own soul absorb'd, As in thy watchings, ere I sink to sleep; And I will give the bending flower-like grace Of that soft form, and the still sweetness throned On that pale brow, and in that quivering smile Of voiceless love, a life that shall outlast Their delicate earthly being. There—thy head Bow'd down with beauty, and with tenderness, And lowly thought—even thus—my own Teresa! Oh! the quick glancing radiance, and bright bloom That once around thee hung, have melted now Into more solemn light—but holier far, And dearer, and yet lovelier in mine eyes, Than all that summer flush! For by my couch, In patient and serene devotedness, Thou hast made those rich hues and sunny smiles, Thine offering unto me. Oh! I may give Those pensive lips, that clear Madonna brow, And the sweet earnestness of that dark eye, Unto the canvass—I may catch the flow Of all those drooping locks, and glorify With a soft halo what is imaged thus— But how much rests unbreathed! My faithful one! What thou hast been to me! This bitter world, This cold unanswering world, that hath no voice To greet the heavenly spirit—that drives back All Birds of Eden, which would sojourn here A little while—how have I turn'd away From its keen soulless air, and in thy heart, Found ever the sweet fountain of response, To quench my thirst for home! The dear work grows Beneath my hand—the last! Each faintest line With treasured memories fraught. Oh! weep thou not Too long, too bitterly, when I depart! Surely a bright home waits us both—for I, In all my dreams, have turn'd me not from God; And Thou—oh! best and purest! stand thou there— There, in thy hallow'd beauty, shadowing forth The loveliness of love!