| 
 To N. D. Stenhouse, Esq. 
Dark days have passed, but you who taught me then 
To look upon the world with trustful eyes, 
Are not forgotten!  Quick to sympathise 
With noble thoughts, I’ve dreamt of moments when 
Your low voice filled with strains of fairer skies! 
Stray breaths of Grecian song that went and came, 
Like floating fragrance from some quiet glen 
In those far hills which shine with classic fame 
Of passioned nymphs and grand-browed god-like men! 
I sometimes fear my heart hath lost the same 
Sweet sense of harmony; but this I know 
That Beauty waits on you where’er you go, 
Because she loveth child-like Faith!  Her bowers 
Are rich for it with glad perennial flowers.
   
 Elizabeth Barrett Browning 
A lofty Type of all her sex, I ween, 
My English brothers, though your wayward race 
Now slight the Soul that never wore a screen, 
And loved too well to keep her noble place! 
Ah, bravest Woman that our World hath seen 
(A light in spaces wild and tempest-tost), 
In every verse of thine, behold, we trace 
The full reflection of an earnest face 
And hear the scrawling of an eager pen! 
O sisters! knowing what you’ve loved and lost, 
I ask where shall we find its like, and when? 
That dear heart with its passion sorrow-crost, 
And pathos rippling, like a brook in June 
Amongst the roses of a windless noon.
   
 
The Bard of ancient lore!  Like one forlorn, 
He turned, enamoured, to the silent Past; 
And searching down its mazes gray and vast, 
As you might find the blossom by the thorn, 
He found fair things in barren places cast 
And brought them up into the light of morn. 
Lo! Truth, resplendent, as a tropic dawn, 
Shines always through his wond’rous pictures!  Hence 
The many quick emotions which are born 
Of an Imagination so intense! 
The chargers’ hoofs come tearing up the sward— 
The claymores rattle in the restless sheath; 
You close his page, and almost look abroad 
For Highland glens and windy leagues of heath.
 
  |