"Not a sound

But, echoing in me,

Vibrates all around

With a blind delight,

Till it breaks on Thee,

Queen of Night!

Every tree,

O'ershadowing with gloom,

Seems to cover thee

Secret, dark, love-still'd,

Advertisement..

In a holy room

Silence-filled.

"Let no moon

Creep up the heaven to-night;

I in darksome noon

Walking hopefully,

Seek my shrouded light--

Grope for thee!

"Darker grow

The borders of the dark!

Through the branches glow,

From the roof above,

Star and diamond-sparks

Light for love."

Scarcely had the last sounds floated away from the hearing of my own

ears, when I heard instead a low delicious laugh near me. It was not the

laugh of one who would not be heard, but the laugh of one who has just

received something long and patiently desired--a laugh that ends in

a low musical moan. I started, and, turning sideways, saw a dim white

figure seated beside an intertwining thicket of smaller trees and

underwood.

"It is my white lady!" I said, and flung myself on the ground beside

her; striving, through the gathering darkness, to get a glimpse of the

form which had broken its marble prison at my call.

"It is your white lady!" said the sweetest voice, in reply, sending a

thrill of speechless delight through a heart which all the love-charms

of the preceding day and evening had been tempering for this culminating

hour. Yet, if I would have confessed it, there was something either in

the sound of the voice, although it seemed sweetness itself, or else in

this yielding which awaited no gradation of gentle approaches, that did

not vibrate harmoniously with the beat of my inward music. And likewise,

when, taking her hand in mine, I drew closer to her, looking for the

beauty of her face, which, indeed, I found too plenteously, a cold

shiver ran through me; but "it is the marble," I said to myself, and

heeded it not.

She withdrew her hand from mine, and after that would scarce allow me to

touch her. It seemed strange, after the fulness of her first greeting,

that she could not trust me to come close to her. Though her words

were those of a lover, she kept herself withdrawn as if a mile of space

interposed between us.

"Why did you run away from me when you woke in the cave?" I said.

"Did I?" she returned. "That was very unkind of me; but I did not know

better."

"I wish I could see you. The night is very dark."




Most Popular