________________________________________________
			      
			 _ III. Maurice Somerville from his turreted den
Maurice Somerville from his turreted den
  Looked out of the window and laid down his pen.
  A soft salty wind from the water was blowing,
  Below in the garden sat Ruth with her sewing.
  And stretched on the grass at her feet Roger lay
  With a book in his hand.
  Through the ripe August day,
  Piped the Katydids' voices, Jack Frost's tally-ho
  Commanding Queen Summer to pack up and go.
  Maurice leaned his head on the casement and sighed,
  Strong and full in his heart surged love's turbulent tide.
  And thoughts of the woman he worshiped with longing
  Took shape and like angels about him came thronging.
  The world was all Mabel! her exquisite face
  Seemed etched on the sunlight and gave it its grace;
  Her eyes made the blue of the heavens, the sun
  Was her wonderful hair caught and coiled into one
  Shining mass.  With a reverent, worshipful awe,
  It was Mabel, fair Mabel, dear Mabel he saw,
  When he looked up to God.
                They had been much together
  Through all the bright stretches of midsummer weather,
  Ruth, Roger, and Mabel and he.  Scarce a day
  But the four were united in work or in play.
  And much of the play to a man or a maid
  Not in love had seemed labor.  Recital, charade,
  Garden party, church festival, musical, hop,
  Were all planned by Miss Lee without respite or stop.
  The poor were the richer; school, hospital, church,
  The heathen, the laborer left in the lurch
  By misfortune, the orphan, the indigent old,
  Our kind Lady Bountiful aided with gold
  Which she filched from the pockets of pleasure--God's spoil,
  And God's blessing will follow such lives when they toil
  Through an infinite sympathy.
                Fair Mabel Lee
  Loved to rule and to lead.  She was eager to be
  In the eyes of the public.  That modern day craze
  Possessed her in secret, and this was its phase.
  An innocent, even commendable, fad
  Which filled empty larders and cheered up the sad.
  She loved to do good.  But, alas! in her heart,
  She loved better still the authoritative part
  Which she played in her town.
  'Neath the saint's aureole
  Lurked the feminine tyrant who longed to control,
  And who never would serve; but her sway was so sweet,
  That her world was contented to bow at her feet.
  Who toils in the great public vineyard must needs
  Let other hands keep his own garden from weeds.
  So busy was Mabel with charity fairs
  She gave little thought to her home or its cares.
  Mrs. Lee, like the typical modern day mother,
  Was maid to her daughter; the father and brother
  Were slaves at her bidding; an excellent plan
  To make a tyrannical wife for some man.
  Yet where was the man who, beholding the grace
  Of that slight girlish creature, and watching her face
  With its infantile beauty and sweetness, would dare
  Think aught but the rarest of virtues dwelt there?
  Rare virtues she had, but in commonplace ones
  Which make happy husbands and home loving sons
  She was utterly lacking.  Ruth Somerville saw
  In sorrow and silence this blemishing flaw
  In the friend whom she loved with devotion!  Maurice
  Saw only the angel with eyes full of peace.
  The faults of plain women are easily seen.
  But who cares to peer back of beauty's fair screen
  For things which are ugly to look on?
  The lover
  Is not quite in love when his sharp eyes discover
  The flaws in his jewel.
  Maurice from his room
  Looked dreamily down on the garden of bloom,
  Where Ruth sat with Roger; he smiled as he thought
  How quickly the world sated cynic was brought
  Into harness by Cupid.  The man mad with drink,
  And the man mad with love, is quite certain to think
  All other men drunkards or lovers.  In truth
  Maurice had expected his friend to love Ruth.
  "She was young, she was fair; with her bright sunny art
  She could scatter the mists from his world befogged heart.
  She could give him the one heaven under God's dome,
  A peaceful, well ordered, and love-guarded home.
  And he? why of course he would worship her!  When
  Cupid finds the soft spot in the hearts of such men
  They are ideal husbands."  Maurice Somerville
  Felt the whole world was shaping itself to his will.
  And his heart stirred with joy as, by thought necromancy,
  He made the near future unfold to his fancy,
  And saw Ruth the bride of his friend, and the place
  She left vacant supplied with the beauty and grace
  Of this woman he longed for, the love of his life,
  Fair Mabel, his angel, his sweet spirit wife.
  Maurice to his desk turned again and once more
  Began to unburden his bosom and pour
  His heart out on paper--the poet's relief,
  When drunk with life's rapture or sick with its grief.
  _Song._
  When shall I tell my lady that I love her?
    Will it be while the sunshine woos the world,
  Or when the mystic twilight bends above her,
    Or when the day's bright banners all are furled?
  Will wild winds shriek, or will the calm stars glow,
  When I shall tell her that I love her so,
                I love her so?
  I think the sun should shine in all his glory;
    Again, the twilight seems the fitting time.
  Yet sweet dark night would understand the story,
    So old, so new, so tender, so sublime.
  Wild storms should rage to chord with my desire,
  Yet faithful stars should shine and never tire,
  And never tire.
  Ah, if my lady will consent to listen,
    All hours, all times, shall hear my story told.
  In amorous dawns, on nights when pale stars glisten
    In dim hushed gloamings and in noon hours bold,
  While thunders crash, and while the winds breathe low,
  Will I re-tell her that I love her so.
  I love her so. _ 
                 
               Read next: 4. The October Day Had Been Luscious And Fair
               Read previous: 2. The Short-Sighted Minister Preached At Bay Bend
               Table of content of Three Women
               
		 
               
               GO TO TOP OF SCREEN
               
               Post your review
Your review will be placed after the table of content of this book