THE WORST OF IT. 1. WOULD it were I had been false, not you: On my speckled hide; not you, the pride 2. I had dipped in life's struggle, and out again, Bore specks of it here, there, easy to see, When I found my swan and the cure was plain; The dull turned bright as I caught your white On my bosom: you saved me - saved in vain If you ruined yourself, and all through me! D 3. Yes, all through the speckled beast that I am, Since on better thought you break, as you ought, Vows words, no angel set down, some elf Mistook,- for an oath, an epigram! 4. Yes, might I judge you, here were my heart, I choose to be yours, for my proper part, Yours, leave or take, or mar me or make; If I acquiesce, why should you be teased With the conscience-prick and the memory-smart? 5. But what will God say? O, my sweet, Think, and be sorry you did this thing! Though earth were unworthy to feel your feet, There's a Heaven above may deserve your love: Should you forfeit Heaven for a snapt gold ring And a promise broke, were it just or meet? 6. And I to have tempted you! I, who tried 7. She, ruined? How? No Heaven for her? Crowns to give, and none for the brow That looked like marble and smelt like myrrh ? Shall the robe be worn, and the palm-branch borne, And she go graceless, she graced now Beyond all saints, as themselves aver? 8. Hardly! That must be understood! The earth is your place of penance, then ; Nor 9. It will come, I suspect, at the end of life, When you walk alone, and review the past; And I, who so long shall have done with strife, And journeyed my stage, and earned my wage, And retired as was right, I am called at last When the Devil stabs you, to lend the knife. 10. He stabs for the minute of trivial wrong, The happy, that lasted my whole life long : For a promise broke, not for first words spoke, The true, the only, that turn my grave To a blaze of joy and a crash of song. 11. Witness beforehand! Off I trip On a safe path gay through the flowers you flung: My very name made great by your lip, And my heart aglow with the good I know Of a perfect year when we both were young, And I tasted the angels' fellowship. 12. And witness, moreover ... Ab, but wait! I spy the loop whence an arrow shoots! It may be for yourself, when you meditate, That you grieve for slain ruth, murdered truth: "Though falsehood escape in the end, what boots? How truth would have triumphed!"— you sigh too late. 13. Ay, who would have triumphed like you, I say! You should hardly grudge, could I be your judge! For I was true at least 14. O, true enough! And, dear, truth is not as good as it seems! Commend me to conscience! Idle stuff! Much help is in mine, as I mope and pine, And skulk through day, and scowl in my dreams At my swan's obtaining the crow's rebuff. |