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that Demosthenes uttered the same words to the workmen in his sword-factory that he did in the courts, the council, or the assembly; would they seem the same words to these workmen themselves as they heard in the public orations? Suppose an obscure man could think like Burke, feel like Fox, or speak like Chatham; would he ever so think, feel, or speak in obscurity? or, if he did, who would recognize it, or who would mind it? It may be said that such men would force themselves into station. This has nothing to do with the supposition-it does not weaken, but strengthen the argument; for it shows that power seeks position. It goes still further: it implies that position is a necessary element in the action of power. An ordinary man in public station has a value given even to commonplace words that eloquence itself can not obtain or genius win in more retired situations. Every Sunday there is nobler and finer speech in scores of pulpits throughout Christendom than some of the most brilliant men pronounce in senates, yet not one preacher in a thousand rises to the fame of an orator. Is it, then, that eloquence is one thing in the pulpit and another in the senate? No. What, then, is the difference? The difference of position. The preacher speaks to a congregation, the senator speaks to nations; and for one orator in the senate there are thousands in the pulpit. And it is the same with moral influence. The peasant of worth and wisdom is not less elevated than the celebrated sage or worker; but the peasant's elevation is only dimly seen even by his family and his neighborhood-that of the celebrated sage or worker lasts during time, and is seen and known of all the world. It is therefore to no purpose that we argue; we do not reach our friend's case. He may be feeble as well as ambitious; but if we say to him, "Ain't you too sensitive?" we may but prick the sorest spot of his infirmity, and irritate when we mean to soothe.

Men also become morbid as to what they consider the measure of their own merit. No doubt there are often judgments that are extremely false and painfully unjust; and if the ill-treated are indignant and complain, it is often from a righteous truthfulness, and not from egotism or envy, vanity and moroseness. The mature veteran sees a youth sent to command him; the gray-haired curate finds in his old age the parish which he has faithfully served for half a century sold to a sporting parson, or given to the bishop's son-in-law; the bold and honest politician, true to his constituents and loyal to his country, sees that for his independence he is excluded from office, and for his integrity fails of re-election, while the worthless rise to power, and unprincipled praters win the popular suffrage; the diligent, skillful, and faithful manager of a mercantile firm, who has been the architect of its wealth and greatness, who has thrown his life into its capital, sees that year after year he remains a servant, with no chance of rising to the dignity of a partner, while the place that he has severely earned is bestowed on some idler

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with full purse and empty pate; superannuated and worn-out, he is dismissed upon a paltry pension. If these, and such like in every department of life, complain, we must not blame them, nor meet them with the cold inquiry, “Ain't you too sensitive?" for their sensitiveness is a part of their virtue. Yet it will be equally in vain to say it to the foolish, who imagine that others judge them falsely, because they do not rightly judge themselves. They have one standard of their own merit, those outside have another. will be useless to try to reconcile these standards not only different but opposite. They are contradictories which not even Hegel could harmonize. The subjective idea of their deserving in their own minds and the objective idea of it in the minds of others are, necessarily, repulsive, each of each; if any one can harmonize them, he has brought into union the subjective and the objective in a most difficult example, and solved what has been hitherto regarded by sober thinkers as the most impossible problem of metaphysics.

If

If, therefore, a man comes to you and tells you that his article has not been accepted by this Magazine, or that his book has been most unmercifully cut up by that Review, do not say to him, "Ain't you too sensitive?" but say to him, cordially and kindly, "My dear fellow, take care of your nervous system, and strengthen your digestion." If a friend of yours makes a bad speech and has the grace to repent it, do not prostrate him, but deepen his repentance. the stuff is in him, he will get up again and startle those who mocked him. "Try again""Try again," is the maxim of all manly energy; and if one fails at last, and his efforts have been wise, his loss, in the long-run, becomes gain to others. So, if a military commander, on technical reasons, tells you why his profound strategy should have been annihilation to the enemy, but you see that the enemy is alive and kicking, forbear, wait, think-abide the issue, but do not dogmatize or prophesy. If a man descants to you on his wonderful financial sagacity, who has yet always been in a state of chronic failure, listen to him patiently, but do not lend him your money.

Still, there are always in the world men who merit success and do not gain it. They are either in advance of their time, or in some way they do not understand it, and so the time does not feel them, or soon forgets them. Say not, then, to the thinker-the writer-the singer-the worker-the enthusiast, whose genius is divinely ardent for liberty and goodness, righteousness and liberty-say not to him when he is sad, downcast, and disappointed, "Ain't you too sensitive?”

We have a few reflections to make, and then we close. One is, the absurd way in which the doctrine of compensation is generally presented. As a person hears it commonly stated, it would almost seem to be a misfortune to be handsome, stout, and healthy; to be well-born, rich, and educated. Now this is all nonsense. It is true, indeed, that in comparison with a living soul

hit between them both as fine as a razor's edge. But those who seem to need consolation are often as unreasonably obstinate as their comforters are awkwardly absurd. The brother of a clergyman had been prostrated by a severe domestic bereavement. The clergyman exhausted all the common topics of consolation. The afflicted man listened with dumb attention, and then at last gasped out: "Brother, I have thought on some of these things." A rough man of the

death of her husband. He exhausted all his commonplaces, and found that he had made no impression. At length, vexed and disappointed, he exclaimed: "Well, dash it, Madam! what's to be done about it?"

all the material universe is as nothing; that in comparison with an immortal soul all human history is but a dream; but relatively to this world, and to the present life, the good numbers in the lottery of nature are not without a marked and desirable value. To be handsome is not to be foolish on the contrary, good-nature and a handsome face are almost a guarantee for kindly views of the world and generous conduct in its affairs, or for domestic grace and sweetness. To be stout and healthy is, in ordinary circum-world was trying to comfort a widow on the stances, to be also frank and brave; and if the stalwart are otherwise they meet with infamy and disgrace. The pity which is given to the petulance and irritation of the feeble is a natural penalty and a moral humiliation. To be wellborn, physically or socially, is an advantage which only the most shallow or the most vulgar mind will underrate. To be rich is not to be vicious or licentious, but to have a safe-guard from most of the basest temptations, and to have in one's power an instrument of the most beneficent virtues. We, the writer, have to do the best we can with poverty; but we do most conscientiously believe we should have done wonderfully better with riches. We should have been more good-natured, good-humored, in every way more agreeable. With one half of what old Astor said a man might be well-off on, we should not be the cynic that we are; the milk in us of human kindness would not have soured; we would not have scolded our wife, or snubbed our children, or cut our friends-we would have been brightly placid as the summer lake, mildly shining as the moonlit hill; we would have been affectionate to dunces, and smiled at all creation. Despite of all the praises which the struggling, the disappointed, or the satiated lavish on the blessings of mediocrity or indigence, we sincerely believe that more truth, goodness, and all the graces and charities that make life beautiful are to be found among the wealthy than among the destitute. Ordinary virtue among the destitute is HEROISM; among the wealthy it is a matter of course.

Still more absurd are the usual forms of giving consolation or offering assistance. Sometimes the manner of doing this wounds more bitterly than the actual affliction. A feeble man was passing along a city street from a railroad station, carrying a traveling-bag which seemed to fatigue him. A stalwart fellow came beside him. "Let me carry that," said Hercules. "No, thank you," said Doddikins. "You'd better," insisted Hercules; "for you're nothing but a cripple." Now you observe that unhappy phrase, "You're nothing but a cripple," crushed a world of gratitude bubbling up in the breast of Doddikins, and for the moment blunted him to the generous good-nature in the heart of Hercules. To be gracious, and to hit the almost invisible point between grief and apathy, is the rare art which few possess of giving consolation. When affliction is present, according to Sterne, consolation is too soon; when affliction is past, it is too late: there is a space which you must

There are griefs that will not speak-there are griefs that can not speak-and why not leave them to the sanctity of their silence? Why obtrude on them the outward forms of even relig ious consolation? They are awfully holy in themselves, and the soul must endure them in its solemn solitude with God. To insult such sorrows with words, however sacred, seems to us a sort of pious profanity. Those of the olden faith, who saw in all their life the immediate action of divine power, did not mouth or mumble phrases; but while their hearts were torn, simply said "It is the Lord: let him do what seemeth him good." They then put sackcloth on their bodies, and ashes on their heads, and bent themselves in silence to the ground: those who came to condole with them lay as they did, prostrate in the dust, and did not add to their calamity by mockery of words. Were any peculiar misfortune to befall ourselves, so much do we know of the pain it would cost to friends not to be able to feel it in the measure or degree that we should, that we would at once write to them to be at ease-to be natural. They could not have the secret of our woe. We would not wish them to have it. It is worse than cruel to put them on the rack of trying to feel what, outside of the individual, it is not in the power of humanity to comprehend or to communicate. We would at once relieve them from this great torture. We would tell them to live, as they had lived, their daily life; to do as they had done, their daily work; and enjoy as they had enjoyed, what God and nature gave them. Then might we honestly stay alone with our own heart and heaven.

Let no reader mistake our doctrine. We preach no selfish isolation. We simply maintain that there are all through life certain conditions of experience, which only similar conditions of experience can interpret; and that this interpretation is essential to any real and inward sympathy. But the want of this mind-sympathy or heart-sympathy is no barrier to any of the great charities or duties of life. We have always enough in common to secure these, and no peculiarities of individual trial change or multiply them. But as to such trial as is strictly individual, silence is most honorable wisdom, self-reliance and self-endurance, the most gener

ous heroism. Let each, in meek and magnani- | of talking sympathy-which at the most can mous spirit, bear the pain, which others can not only be conventional and verbal. Generous retshare or help, within himself: and no man that icence on one side-kind reserve on the other. respects his own personal or moral individuality This is what, on both sides, is sincere, just, and will babble of his inward sufferings, whether re- true; true to nature, true to honesty, true to the tributive or blameless, and grieve or humiliate best goodness, and to the purest sanctities of huhis friends by exacting the task-work from them man life.

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Toward King Redwald's border-thither drawn
By hope, which was twin-brother to despair-
The grey King Redwald, though to him unknown,
Long time his father's friend, who ruled a land
In peace beyond the vapor-burdened hills.
But Ethelbert upon the fliers swooped
Like peregrine on pigeons, striking down
And scattering. Edwin 'scaped, but 'scaped as one
Wet-fetlocked from the Morecambe tide, that brings
Sea-silence in an hour to wide-spread sands
Loud with pack-horses, and the crack of whips.
And on the way the steed of steeds beloved
Burst noble heart and fell; and with a pang
Keener than that which oftentimes is felt
By human death-beds, Edwin left the corse
To draw the unseen raven from the sky;
Then fearful lest the villages of men
Might babble of his steps to Ethelbert,
Certain to sweep that way with clouds of horse,
He sought rude wastes and heathy wildernesses
Through which the stagnant streams crept black and

sour.

Once, coming on a string of traffickers,
With laden mules bound for a town, he hid
Within the hollow of a ruined oak

Till the blue evening steaming from the ground
Made the star wink; then, signaled by the owl,
He from his hiding stole. When earth was red
With set of sun he passed into the land
Of reed and fen, by many a wing be-clanged,
And all the night he journeyed, while o'erhead
The windy heaven streamed from east to west,
And dim in vapor, keen in azure gulfs,

And all the soft green bottom of the gorge
Was strewn with hermit stones that sideways leaned,
Smooth-cheek'd with emerald moss. Here Edwin

paused

To quench his thirst, and rising, was aware
Of a gay youth that slid from off a rock
With cordial greeting and toward him came:
Slender as any girl: the golden hair,
That plenteously unto his shoulders hung,
Divided, gave to view a happy face
Pure red and white as apple bloom on bough.
He was a page, he said, at Redwald's Court,
And going thither. "Thither go I, too,"
Quoth Edwin; "and have traveled since the morn.
If it mislikes thee not, companionship,
Poor as mine own, may kill a weary mile."
So without farther parley on they went-
One blithe in spirit, and as gaily dight
As goldfinch swinging on a thistle top;
The other sad of brow, and in attire
As homely as the sparrow that has chirped
Its whole life long upon a smoky thatch.
And as they walked, the stranger full of life,
Grew garrulous on Redwald and his sons.
To him the Prince gave eager ear, though oft
The kingliness behind the cloud put out
A ray that dazzled, to be swift withdrawn.
"Redwald," he said, was grey and sad of blood.
A man that, rooted in a bitter past,

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Drew sap enough to keep the trunk alive,
But not enough to make the foliage green.
His seven sons, hound-footed, falcon-eyed,
The maddest men for hunting, who could rest
No more than could the winds." And then his
speech

The feverish stars pressed forward to their bournes. Brightened like water round a sunbeam.

Midnighted thrice in wilderness he saw
The far-meandering lake beneath the moon,
Flicker in silver round a woody isle-

The lake he oft had heard of. And he knew
Another day would bring him to the Court
Of the grey King who for his father's sake
Would shelter him in this his sore distress.

Next morning, from the sandy hills he saw
The bare blue desert of the sea flow out
In glittering wrinkles 'neath a cloudy dawn;
And when the sun burned through the mists, and
grew

A mass of blinding splendor that out-rayed,
He dipped into the valleys. On through woods,
And roadless meads he passed, till at the hour
When fiercest is the light, he weary came
To a ravine that broke down from the hill
With many a tumbled crag: a streamlet leapt
From stony shelf to shelf: the rocks were touched
By purple foxgloves, plumed by many a fern;
VOL. XXIII.-No. 137.-U u

"Ah,

The Court is richest in a maid that comes
Like silence after hoof and bugle-blare;
Who owns the whitest hand, the sweetest cheek
Air touches, sunlight sees. And Time, like one

Who in the task delights, with every grace
And glow is dressing her, so that to-day
Shames yesterday, to-morrow shames to-day."
From this height soon he fell and 'gan rehearse
The petty spites and scandals of the Court:
How the King's frown had dimmed the warrior's
arms,

How the proud lady scorned the faithful knight,
How all that day the forests would be loud
With hound and horn, how 'twas the King's intent
That night to give a feast to all his lords,
Himself upon the dais. As Edwin winced,
The page turned smiling. "See, my tongue runs on
Of court and courtier, princess, prince, and king,
Unmindful of thy business! Let me know.
Perchance in me resides some little power
To gain thee audience of a mighty lord,

Though in the stirrup were his hasty foot

Glad should I be." In strange sort Edwin smiled.
"What trade have such as I with mighty lords?
'Tis with King Redwald that my business lies.
A king is like the unexcepting sun
That shines on all alike." Discoursing thus
They entered on a broad and public way
Whereon were travelers and lively stir,
And now a maid and now a knight went past
With light upon his armor; and at length,
The while the press was growing more and more,
They came upon the palace, vast in shade
Against the sunset. Noisy was the place
With train and retinue, and the cumbrous pomps
The feasters left without. The steeds were staked
Upon the sward, and from the gates the folk,
Busy as bees at entrance of a hive,
Swarmed in and out. Men lay upon the grass,
Men leaned with folded arms against the walls,
Men diced with eager hands and covetous eyes;
Men sat on grass with hauberk, greave and helm
And great bright sword, and as they sat they sang
The prowess of their masters deep in feast,—
How foremost in the chase he speared the boar,
How through the terrible battle press he rode,
Death following like a squire. Prince Edwin
paused:

On his companion's shoulder laid his hand
With something like affection. "Here we part;
Thanks for thy courtesy. If I regain
That which my father on his death-bed left,
This day thou wilt remember. Fare thee well."
Thereat the page into the palace went:
But Edwin sat without till darkness came,
And dicers all had vanished; then he rose
And, entering, claimed an audience of the King,
For his was instant business, life and death.
The seneschals swift bustled to and fro
Regardless; but at last it reached the King
That the waste dark had given up a man
That sought his face and would not be denied:
Then at his wish, the haggard Prince was led
To the great hall wherein was set the feast;
And at his step, from out the smoky glare
And gloom of guttering torches, weeping pitch,
A hundred bearded faces were upraised,
Flaming with mead: and from their master's stools
Great dogs upstarting snarled; and from the dais,
The King, while wonder raised the eyebrow, asked
What man he was? what business brought him
there?

When Edwin thus, the target of all eyes:

"One who has brothered with the ghostly bats, That skim the twilight on their leathern wings, And with the rooks that caw in airy towns; One intimate with misery: who has known The fiend that in the hind's pinched entrail sits Devising treason, and the death of kingsFamine the evil-visaged--that once faced, There is no terror left to scare a man. Though my associates are the horrible shapes That press on dying eyes in wildernesses Where they must stare unclosed, this hand I stretch Is native to the sceptre, knows its touch Familiarly as thine. Though hunted like Some noisome beast, that when it steals abroad The cry spreads, and the village rises up With sticks and stones to kill it. I have seen, When I but oped my mouth, men look as if It thundered in the air."

As from a crag

That rises sheer from out the fresh-blown surge,
Upsprings a smoke of sea-fowl, puff on puff,
Until the air is dark with countless wings
And deaf with plumy clangor, from the feast
Broke laughter. When it ceased, the smiling King
With the intruder played. "Whence comest thou?
What king art thou? where doth thy kingdom lie?
In earth or air? and if indeed a king,
Though ne'er stood king in such unkingly plight,
Why hast thou been so strangely companied
By midnight and the owls?"

Then Edwin cried-
"O list fell hunger and the mountain wind
To the loud bruit of fed prosperity,
That never can be neighbored with distress!
No height so high, but you can fall from it.
Earth counts ten graves for every living man;
A single scroll contains our victories,
But 'tis a dreary volume, that the names
Of our defeats o'erflow. I was a king,
Have been destroyed in battle, lost my home,
Have fed on berries like the moorland birds;
Have drunk the stream that tameless creatures
drink-
Slept where I could.
From whence I come?

Thou ask'st me who I am?
From Deira do I come.

I am that Egbert's son who loved thee well.
Oft thou and he were tenants of one crib-
Two growing apples reddening cheek to cheek
Upon the self-same bough-two pebbles glazed
By the same wavelet's hand. In Egbert's name-
Egbert these twenty years in earth-his son
Claims shelter from thee."

When he ceased, and when
A murmur grew among the guests, wherein
Doubt with assurance clashed, the King arose,
A sudden flash of color on his face,

Of which, if half was pleasure, half was shame,
And in the seeing of the spacious hall
Stepped down, took Edwin in his arms, while speech
Came like a hurrying brook that overlays

Eddy with eddy, watery swirl with swirl.

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Something of this I heard, as one immersed In boundless woods, the falling of a tree: Who hears a sound, but can not tell from whence, Nor whether nibbling centuries of time Or woodman's axe hath sapped it. Twas thy fall! 'Twas thy name rumor babbled indistinct!

And thou art come unto thy father's friend
For shelter! Thou shalt have it. Would that
thou

Hadst asked for something costlier. So disguised!
So covered up!-but never murky cloud
Let slip so fair a sun! "Tis Fortune's trick
To muffle up her gifts in dusky hulls,
That, when they throw their mantles off, surprise
May richness over-double. Egbert's child'
Nay, his own self returned again to run
A large career of noble deeds, and reap
An aftermath of fame. It is a sight
To make me young again! While I peruse
The lips, the nose, the color of the curls,
The build of brow, the contour of the cheek,
The wild-hawk eye, and when, as now, thou smil'st,
The face's sunbeam-all this melts away,
And through the cloudiness of forty years
I see thy father and myself, when we,
Like twin lambs, raced across the meads of youth,
Happy as lambs, and innocent as they-

While our young lives were bright as silks un- Was Edwin's, who threw down his weary length,

creased,

Or daggers newly gilt; the careless days
When life was May and full of singing birds;
Before that we had seen or kissed our wives;

Ere thou, young sir, wert thought of. Welcome
here!

Although it were the son of my own loins
Long absent from these eyes, I could not grace
His coming with a single smile beyond
These now I give thee. Welcome, yet again!
But now have meats and drinks: the moorland
fruits

And streams I thank, for hunger will enrich
This my poor table more than cups of gold.
Sit here beside me, 'twixt me and my sons-
Nay, as thou art. At bed-time, doff these weeds.
Thou art a new found jewel, and to-morrow
We'll have thee richly set."

And, like a fallen column, slept till morn.
Then touched by earliest beam, he waking, stared
With a blank eyeball, troubled as a man
Who dies in sleep and wakes in another world.
The chamber broke upon him weird and strange-
He knew not what had been, or where he was--
Till, like the lightning come and gone at once,
Swift memory supplied the missing link
And knit him with himself. He rose at last,
Unbreathed on by the cold ungracious air
That lives in waste and wilderness, and saw
A pile of raiment in the chamber, heaped
In fold and golden crease. Enclothed, he shone
Like some gay kingfisher whose flight illumes
A river's sandy bank. His rich cap lay
Upon the rushes when the King came in,
With a "good morrow" in his face and eye.
Well pleased, he laughed, "So, so, the grub has
cracked

Then Edwin stepped To a rare butterfly! Did'st rest as well
When thou wert ligging 'neath the round-eyed owl,

Across the dogs that lay upon the floor,
With drowsy muzzles on their outstretched paws | And heard him scold his brethren of the waste?
Oft starting into voice as if they chased
And bayed the boar in dream, and took his seat
On the right hand of Redwald, 'mong his sons,
A kingdom's strength upon a battle day.
The lordliest game of forest and of hill
Made that board paradise, within whose smell
The phoenix appetite divinely died
Into a rarer life. Sheep, steer, and boar,
And stags that on the mountain took the dawn
High o'er the rising splendors of the mists,
Were plenteously there. All fowls that pierce
In wedge or caravan the lonely sky,

At winter's sleety whistle, heaped the feast;
With herons kept for kings, and swans that float
Like water-lilies on the glassy mere.
Nor these alone. All fish of glorious scale,
The fruits of English woods, and honey pure
Slow oozing from its labyrinthine cells,
And spacious horns of mead-the blessed mead
That can unpack the laden heart of care-
That climbs a heated reveler to the brain,
And sits there singing songs. And seated high,
'Mid torches' glare and glimmer, minstrels sang
Mailed gods of war, grim giants, kings who walked
In the grey dawn and morning light of time

Come with me to the lads, for they at noon
Will fly their falcons, and the sport will be
The gayer for thy presence." Then he led,
Through a long passage, toward a noise of dogs
That ever nearer grew, and entered straight
A mighty chamber hung with horn and head;
Its floor bestrewn with arrows, as if War
Grown weary of his trade, had there disrobed
And thrown his quiver down. And in the midst
The brothers stood in hunting gear, and stroked
Great brindled dogs, that leapt about their knees,
And talked of them the while, and called to mind
How this one charged the lowering mountain bull.
What time he stood affronted in the glade
And the spurned earth flew round him in his rages
How the boar's tusk made that one yelp and limp
The day he came upon him in the brake.
"Lads," quoth the King, still holding Edwin's hand,
"I've brought a fair companion for your sport.
Strive which can bend the stiffest bow, which train
The swiftest hound, the highest towering hawk.”
While welcome danced within their cordial eyes,
While one by one they grasped the Prince's hand,
And while the dogs, suspicious, sniffed his heel,
And while an eager babble broke of hawk

Statured like towers; kings whose huge bulks of And steed and hound, and arrow-head and spear,

bone

Unmouldered, yet are seen in twilight caves,
Like some old galley with its sea-worn ribs
Half-sunk in ancient sands. And, while they sang
Of blazoned banners streaming on the wind,
Of arrows splintering on the brazen breast,
Swords red from point to hilt; of trumpets blown,
Shred armor, floundering horses, cries of men,
The light of battle burned in every eye,

In at the door a moment peeped a girl,
Fair as a rose-tree growing thwart a gap
Of ruin, seen against the blue when one
Is dipped in dungeon gloom; and Redwald called.
And at the call she through the chamber came,
And laid a golden head and blushing cheek
Against his breast. He clasped his withered hands
Fondly upon her head, and bent it back,
As one might bend a downward-looking flower

Shouts burst from bearded lips be-drenched with To make its perfect beauty visible,

mead,

Swords and cuirasses rusting on the wall
Clattered as life were in them. So the feast,
Led by the minstrels' scaling voice, and hand
In fury 'mong the harpstrings, roared, till dawn,
Let through a loophole, fell on torches burned,
The upset goblets of the deep debauch,
Lords tumbled on the rushes.

But long ere that
The King, with Edwin and his seven sons,
Left the fierce feasters maddening with the song.
A spacious chamber facing to the east

Then kissed her mouth and cheek. "My little one,
A morsel to these lion whelps of mine,
Yet pearl to pebble, precious gold to iron,
There came last night a stranger to our Court,
Who brought with him a face from out the grave,
And with an ancient friendship warmed my heart.
He stands in centre of thy brethren there
Worthy thy dearest greeting."
As she turned
(Half-breaking from the arms that softly held)
A happy blushing face, with yellow hair
And sweet eyes azure as the flaxen flower,
The dim air brightened round her, and her voice
Brake into silvery welcome, then so stopped

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