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IV.

BEST DEFINITION OF MAN.

MAN is the vainest creature Heaven has made,
Except the peacock, which unpicked would be
Of him a better definition, five to three,
Than Plato's on which classic stress is laid.
I hate his selfishness, effeminate weakness,
Because in him I look for something strong.
(Since strength's his boast), I hate the load of wrong
He legislates to make us tote in meekness,-
Yet, hath the God of Nature given to me
A soul so large, a heart so broadly fashioned
For all that's high, impetuous, and impassioned,
That I'm in love with half the swains I see.
Upbraid me not, cold hearts; mid toil and strife,
This love's the well-spring of my higher life in life.

V.

TO SIDNEY.

WHILOM I closed the portal of my heart,

And said, "No guest shall ever enter more;

But, late thou camest a-rapping on the door
So heavily, it jarring, swung apart,

And in thou sallied'st like a conqueror.

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With manner that bespoke the realm thine own,
Didst take thy seat on its deserted throne,
And straightway, with no tremor born of fear,
Beganst inaugural discourse on love.

Thine eloquence thrilled me like a barbèd dart,

I caught my breath, and strove to say-“Depart!”
But lip and tongue refused alike to move,

And, though thy usurpation then did grieve me,

'Twould well nigh kill me now if thou shouldst leave me.

SONNETS FROM THE ITALIAN.

ADALINA TO ADHÉMAR.

I.

FIRST LOVE.

I HAVE not parted with my fifteenth year—
The flowers of childhood still illume my way-
The founts of childhood just behind me play-
The songs of childhood still are in my ear-
Its footsteps in the halls of memory;

Yet, if my life be counted, not by years,

But drops of bliss commingled with my tears,

Already have I lived a century ;

And should have gray hairs stealing from my wimple,

Like Julia's nurse, be leaning on a staff,

With squeaking voice, and melancholy laugh,
And hoar frosts gleaming in my rosy dimple—

But, like brimmed wine-bowl Bach'nal founts replenish,
Is my heart bubbling o'er with love's life-giving rhenish.

II.

THE TIME WE MET.

It was the time of vernal bud and blossom,
When blushing Flora roved by wood and lea,
Breathing perfume from her ambrosial bosom,
Fresh palpitating from the Deity;
When pearly-footed brooklets down the vale,
Went leaping into ocean's calm embrace;
And sweet-voiced fountains sang in every dale,
As glad to leave their ice-bound hiding-place,
And bask in April's renovating noon;

When from a thousand wind-harps music burst,
And my young heart with nature was in tune,
That I beheld thee, dear Adhémar, first,

And from Love's quiver sped the fatal dart

That held, and holds transfixed my bleeding heart.

III.

LOVE BORN FULL-STATURED.

My love was born full-statured.

With degree,

Of Heaven's high school, from out my soul it hove,

As sprang Minerva from the brow of Jove.

A beam launched into immortality.

It walks beside me like a guiding star,
Flinging a halo on my earthly way

More vivifying than the god of day

Sheds on the orbit that he treads afar.

It holds my pulses-drains my purple veins-
Gobbles my heart down, when it does not need it,
Which, like Prometheus' liver grows to feed it,
Drawing its nutriment from sweetest pains—
And though it tears me, well I love its culture,
Nor crave a Hercules to slay the gnawing vulture.

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