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Coventry Patmore - The Angel In The House. Book I. Canto IX.Coventry Patmore - The Angel In The House. Book I. Canto IX.
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Preludes. I The Wife`s Tragedy               Man must be pleased; but him to please               Is woman`s pleasure; down the gulf               Of his condoled necessities               She casts her best, she flings herself.               How often flings for nought, and yokes               Her heart to an icicle or whim,               Whose each impatient word provokes               Another, not from her, but him;               While she, too gentle even to force               His penitence by kind replies,               Waits by, expecting his remorse,               With pardon in her pitying eyes;               And if he once, by shame oppress`d,               A comfortable word confers,               She leans and weeps against his breast,               And seems to think the sin was hers;               And whilst his love has any life,               Or any eye to see her charms,               At any time, she`s still his wife,               Dearly devoted to his arms;                  She loves with love that cannot tire;               And when, ah woe, she loves alone,               Through passionate duty love springs higher,               As grass grows taller round a stone. II Common Graces               Is nature in thee too spiritless,               Ignoble, impotent, and dead,               To prize her love and loveliness               The more for being thy daily bread?               And art thou one of that vile crew               Which see no splendour in the sun,               Praising alone the good that`s new,               Or over, or not yet begun?               And has it dawn`d on thy dull wits               That love warms many as soft a nest,               That, though swathed round with benefits,               Thou art not singularly blest?               And fail thy thanks for gifts divine,               The common food of many a heart,               Because they are not only thine?               Beware lest in the end thou art               Cast for thy pride forth from the fold,               Too good to feel the common grace               Of blissful myriads who behold               For evermore the Father`s face. III The Zest of Life               Give thanks. It is not time misspent;               Worst fare this betters, and the best,               Wanting this natural condiment,               Breeds crudeness, and will not digest.                  The grateful love the Giver`s law;               But those who eat, and look no higher,               From sin or doubtful sanction draw               The biting sauce their feasts require.               Give thanks for nought, if you`ve no more,               And, having all things, do not doubt               That nought, with thanks, is blest before               Whate`er the world can give, without. IV Fool and Wise               Endow the fool with sun and moon,               Being his, he holds them mean and low;               But to the wise a little boon               Is great, because the giver`s so. Sahara. I               I stood by Honor and the Dean,               They seated in the London train.               A month from her! yet this had been,               Ere now, without such bitter pain.               But neighbourhood makes parting light,               And distance remedy has none;               Alone, she near, I felt as might               A blind man sitting in the sun;               She near, all for the time was well;               Hope`s self, when we were far apart,               With lonely feeling, like the smell               Of heath on mountains, fill`d my heart.                  To see her seem`d delight`s full scope,               And her kind smile, so clear of care,               Ev`n then, though darkening all my hope,               Gilded the cloud of my despair. II               She had forgot to bring a book.               I lent one; blamed the print for old;               And did not tell her that she took               A Petrarch worth its weight in gold.               I hoped she`d lose it; for my love               Was grown so dainty, high, and nice,               It prized no luxury above               The sense of fruitless sacrifice. III               The bell rang, and, with shrieks like death,               Link catching link, the long array,               With ponderous pulse and fiery breath,               Proud of its burthen, swept away;               And through the lingering crowd I broke,               Sought the hill-side, and thence, heart-sick,               Beheld, far off, the little smoke               Along the landscape kindling quick. IV               What should I do, where should I go,               Now she was gone, my love! for mine               She was, whatever here below               Cross`d or usurp`d my right divine.               Life, without her, was vain and gross,               The glory from the world was gone,               And on the gardens of the Close                 As on Sahara shone the sun.                    Oppress`d with her departed grace,                 My thoughts on ill surmises fed;                 The harmful influence of the place                 She went to fill`d my soul with dread.                 She, mixing with the people there,                 Might come back alter`d, having caught                 The foolish, fashionable air                 Of knowing all, and feeling nought.                 Or, giddy with her beauty`s praise,                 She`d scorn our simple country life,                 Its wholesome nights and tranquil days,                 And would not deign to be my Wife.                 ‘My Wife,’ ‘my Wife,’ ah, tenderest word!                 How oft, as fearful she might hear,                 Whispering that name of ‘Wife,’ I heard                 The chiming of the inmost sphere. V                 I pass`d the home of my regret.                 The clock was striking in the hall,                 And one sad window open yet,                 Although the dews began to fall.                 Ah, distance show`d her beauty`s scope!                 How light of heart and innocent                 That loveliness which sicken`d hope                 And wore the world for ornament!                 How perfectly her life was framed;                 And, thought of in that passionate mood,                 How her affecting graces shamed                 The vulgar life that was but good! VI                 I wonder`d, would her bird be fed,                 Her rose-plots water`d, she not by;                 Loading my breast with angry dread                 Of light, unlikely injury.                    So, fill`d with love and fond remorse,                 I paced the Close, its every part                 Endow`d with reliquary force                 To heal and raise from death my heart.                 How tranquil and unsecular                 The precinct! Once, through yonder gate,                 I saw her go, and knew from far                 Her love-lit form and gentle state.                 Her dress had brush`d this wicket; here                 She turn`d her face, and laugh`d, with light                 Like moonbeams on a wavering mere.                 Weary beforehand of the night,                 I went; the blackbird, in the wood,                 Talk`d by himself, and eastward grew                 In heaven the symbol of my mood,                 Where one bright star engross`d the blue.
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