Page:The Yellow Book - 01.djvu/263

Rh Heaven's spheres, slow wheeled on their majestic way,
 * Invoke as they revolve thy orb unseen,
 * And all the pageant of the starry scene,

Wronged by thy absence, chides at thy delay. Shades even as splendours, earth and heaven both
 * Smile at the apparition of thy face,
 * And my own gloom no longer seems so loth;

Yet, while my eye regards thee, thought doth trace
 * Another's image; if in vows be troth,
 * I am not yet estranged from Love's embrace.

Continual separation, however, and the absence of any marked token that he is borne in memory, necessarily prey more and more on the sensitive spirit of the poet. During the first part, her husband's tenure of office as Governor of the Milanese, the Marchioness, as already mentioned, took up her residence in the island of Ischia, where she received her adorer's eloquent aspirations for her welfare—heartfelt, but so worded as to convey a reproach: That this fair isle with all delight abound,
 * Clad be it ever in sky's smile serene,
 * No thundering billow boom from deeps marine,

And calm with Neptune and his folk be found. Fast may all winds by Æolus be bound,
 * Save faintest breath of lispings Zephyrene;
 * And be the odorous earth with glowing green

Of gladsome herbs, bright flowers, quaint foliage crowned. All ire, all tempest, all misfortune be
 * Heaped on my head, lest aught thy pleasure stain,

Rh