From: The Dial, Vol. I, No. II (Oct. 1840)
Author:
Published: Weeks Jordan and Company 1840 Boston
I CAN remember well So sunlight, very warm, That cottage where she dwelt Grass beneath her faint tread Those who conveyed her home,— I am no more below, And Isabel and I
My very early youth,
My sumptuous Isabel,
Who was a girl of truth,
Of golden truth;—we do not often see
Those whose whole lives have only known to be.
On harvest fields and trees,
Could not more sweetly form
Rejoicing melodies
For these deep things, than Isabel for me;
I lay beneath her soul as a lit tree.
Was all o’er mosses green;
I still forever felt
How nothing stands between
The soul and truth; why, starving poverty
Was nothing—nothing, Isabel, to thee.
Bent pleasantly away;
From her ne’er small birds fled,
But kept at their bright play,
Not fearing her; it was her endless motion,
Just a true swell upon a summer ocean.
I mean who led her where
The spirit does not roam,—
Had such small weight to bear,
They scarcely felt; how softly was thy knell
Rung for thee that soft day, girl Isabel.
My life is raised on high;
My fantasy was slow
Ere Isabel could die;
It pressed me down; but now I sail away
Into the regions of exceeding day.
Float on the red brown clouds,
That amply multiply
The very constant crowds
Of serene shapes. Play on Mortality!
Thy happiest hour is that when thou may’st die.
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