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When hearts are trumps.
by Thomas Winthrop Hall.
The Perfect Face.
The Graces, on a summer day, Grew serious for a moment; yea, They thought in rivalry to trace The outline of a perfect face.
Each used a rosebud for a brush, And, while it glowed with sunset's blush, Each painted on the evening sky, And each a star used for the eye.
They finished. Each a curtaining cloud Drew back, and each exclaimed aloud: "Behold, we three have drawn the same, From the same model!" Ah, her name?
I know. I saw the pictures grow.
I saw them falter, fade, and go.
I know the model. Oft she lures My heart. The face, my sweet, was yours.
The Moonlight Sonata.
The notes still float upon the air, Just as they did that night.
I see the old piano there,-- Oh, that again I might!
Her young voice haunts my eager ear; Her hair in the candle-light Still seems an aureole,--a tear Is my spectroscope to-night.
I hear her trembling tell me "No,"
And I know that she answered right But I throw a kiss to the stars, and though She be wed she will dream to-night.
The Kiss
Over the green fields, over the snow, Something I send thee, something I throw.
No one can guess it; no one can know.
Light as a feather, quick as the eye; Thin as a sunbeam, deep as the sky; Worthless, but something a queen could not buy.
Ah, you have caught it, love! How do I know?
Sweet, there are secrets lost ages ago.
Lovers learn all of them. Smile not,--'tis so.
The Bride.
Before her mirror, robed in spotless white, She stands and, wondering, looks at her own face, Amazed at its new loveliness and grace.
Smiling and blushing at the pretty sight, So fraught is she with innocent delight, She feels the tender thrill of his embrace Crushing her lilies into flowery lace; Then sighs and starts, even as though from fright.
Then fleets before her eyes the happy past; She turns from it with petulant disdain, And tries to read the future,--but in vain.
Blank are its pages from the first to last.
She hears faint music, smiles, and leaves the room Just as one rosebud more bursts into bloom.
A Problem.
Give you a problem for your midnight toil,-- One you can study till your hair is white And never solve and never guess aright, Although you burn to dregs your midnight oil?
O Sage, I give one that will make you moil.
Just take one weakling little woman's heart.
Prepare your patience, furbish up your art.
How now? Did I not see you then recoil?
Tell me how many times it has known pain; Tell me what thing will make it feel delight; Tell me when it is modest, when 'tis vain; Tell me when it is wrong and when 'tis right: But tell me this, all other things above,-- Can it feel, Sage, the thing that man calls "Love"?
To Phyllis Reading a Letter.
A smile is curving o'er her creamy cheek, Her bosom swells with all a lover's joy, When love receives a message that the coy Young love-G.o.d made a strong and true heart speak From far-off lands; and like a mountain-peak That loses in one avalanche its cloy Of ice and snow, so doth her breast employ Its hidden store of blushes; and they wreak Destruction, as they crush my aching heart,-- Destruction, wild, relentless, and as sure As the poor Alpine hamlet's; and no art Can hide my agony, no herb can cure My wound. Her very blush says, "We must part."
Why was it always my fate to endure?
A Rose from her hair.
She gave me a rose from her hair, And she hid her young heart within it.
I could hardly speak from despair, Till she gave that rose from her hair, And leaned out over the stair With a blush as she stooped to pin it.
She gave me a rose from her hair, And she hid her young heart within it.
When I told her my Love.
When I told her my love, She was maidenly shy, And she bit at her glove.
I gave Cupid a shove; Yes, I begged him to try, When I told her my love
What was she thinking of As she uttered that sigh And she bit at her glove?
And pray what does it prove That she stopped there to sigh, When I told her my love And she bit at her glove?