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			 _ VI. Wooed, wedded and widowed ere twenty. The life
Wooed, wedded and widowed ere twenty.  The life
  Of Zoe Travers is told in that sentence.  A wife
  For one year, loved and loving; so full of life's joy
  That death, growing jealous, resolved to destroy
  The Eden she dwelt in.  Five desolate years
  She walked robed in weeds, and bathed ever in tears,
  Through the valley of memory.  Locked in love's tomb
  Lay youth in its glory and hope in its bloom.
  At times she was filled with religious devotion,
  Again crushed to earth with rebellious emotion
  And unresigned sorrow.
  Ah, wild was her grief!
  And the years seemed to bring her no balm of relief.
  When a heart from its sorrow time cannot estrange,
  God sends it another to alter and change
  The current of feeling.  Zoe's mother, her one
  Tie to earth, became ill.  When the doctors had done
  All the harm which they dared do with powder and pill,
  They ordered a trial of Dame Nature's skill.
  Dear Nature! what grief in her bosom must stir
  When she sees us turn everywhere save unto her
  For the health she holds always in keeping; and sees
  Us at last, when too late, creeping back to her knees,
  Begging that she at first could have given!
  'Twas so
  Mother Nature's heart grieved o'er the mother of Zoe,
  Who came but to die on her bosom.  She died
  Where the mocking bird poured out its passionate tide
  Of lush music; and all through the dark days of pain
  That succeeded, and over and through the refrain
  Of her sorrow, Zoe heard that wild song evermore.
  It seemed like a blow which pushed open a door
  In her heart.  Something strange, sweet and terrible stirred
  In her nature, aroused by the song of that bird.
  It rang like a voice from the future; a call
  That came not from the past; yet the past held her all.
  To the past she had plighted her vows; in the past
  Lay her one dream of happiness, first, only, last.
  Alone in the world now, she felt the unrest
  Of an unanchored boat on the wild billow's breast.
  Two homes had been shattered; the West held but tombs.
  She drifted again where the magnolia blooms
  And the mocking bird sings.  Oh! that song, that wild strain,
  Whose echoes still haunted her heart and her brain!
  How she listened to hear it repeated!  It came
  Through the dawn to her heart, and the sound was like flame.
  It chased all the shadows of night from her room,
  And burst the closed bud of the day into bloom.
  It leaped to the heavens, it sank to the earth
  It gave life new rapture and love a new birth.
  It ran through her veins like a fiery stream,
  And the past and its sorrow--was only a dream.
  The call of a bird in the spring for its lover
  Is the voice of all Nature when winter is over.
  The heart of the woman re-echoed the strain,
  And its meaning, at last, to her senses was plain.
  Grief's winter was over, the snows from her heart
  Were melted; hope's blossoms were ready to start.
  The spring had returned with its siren delights,
  And her youth and emotions asserted their rights.
  Then memory struggled with passion.  The dead
  Seemed to rise from the grave and accuse her.  She fled
  From her thoughts as from lepers; returned to old ways,
  And strove to keep occupied, filling her days
  With devotional duties.  But when the night came
  She heard through her slumber that song like a flame,
  And her dreams were sweet torture.  She sought all too soon
  To chill the warm sun of her youth's ardent noon
  With the shadows of premature evening.  Her mind
  Lacked direction and purpose.  She tried in a blind,
  Groping fashion to follow an early ideal
  Of love and of constancy, starving the real
  Affectional nature God gave her.  She prayed
  For God's help in unmaking the woman He made,
  As if He repented the thing He had done.
  With the soul of a Sappho, she lived like a nun,
  Hid her thoughts from all women, from men kept apart,
  And carefully guarded the book of her heart
  From the world's prying eyes.  Yet men read through the cover,
  And knew that the story was food for a lover.
  (The dullest of men seemed possessed of the art
  To read what the passions inscribe on the heart.
  Though written in cipher and sealed from the sight,
  Yet masculine eyes will interpret aright.)
  Worn out with the unceasing conflict at last,
  Zoe fled from herself and her sorrowful past,
  And turned to new scenes for diversion from thought.
  New York! oh, what magic encircles that spot
  In the feminine mind of the West!  There, it seems,
  Waits the realization of beautiful dreams.
  There the waters of Lethe unceasingly roll,
  With blessed forgetfulness free to each soul,
  While the doorways that lead to success open wide,
  With Fame in the distance to beckon and guide.
  Mirth lurks in each byway, and Folly herself
  Wears the look of a semi-respectable elf,
  And is to be courted and trusted when met,
  For she teaches one how to be gay and forget,
  And to start new account books with life.
  It was so,
  Since she first heard the name of the city, that Zoe
  Dreamed of life in New York.  It was thither she turned
  To smother the heart that with restlessness burned,
  And to quiet and calm an unsatisfied mind.
  Her plans were but outlines, crude, vague, undefined,
  Of distraction and pleasure.  A snug little home,
  With seclusion and comfort; full freedom to roam
  Where her fancy and income permitted; new faces,
  New scenes, new environments, far from the places
  Where brief joy and long sorrow had dwelt with her; free
  From the curious eyes that seemed ever to be
  Bent upon her.  She passed like a ship from the port,
  Without chart or compass; the plaything and sport
  Of the billows of Fate.
  The parks were all gay
  And busy with costuming duties of May
  When Zoe reached New York.  The rain and the breeze
  Had freshened the gowns of the Northern pine trees
  Till they looked bright as new; all the willows were seen
  In soft dainty garments of exquisite green.
  Young buds swelled with life, and reached out to invite
  And to hold the warm gaze of the wandering light.
  The turf exhaled fragrance; among the green boughs
  The unabashed city birds plighted their vows,
  Or happy young house hunters chirped of the best
  And most suitable nook to establish a nest.
  There was love in the sunshine, and love in the air;
  Youth, hope, home, companionship, spring, everywhere.
  There was youth, there was spring in her blood; yet she only,
  In all the great city, seemed loveless and lonely.
  The trim little flat, facing north on the park,
  Was not homelike; the rooms seemed too sombre and dark
  To her eyes, sun-accustomed; the neighbors too near
  And too noisy.  The medley of sounds hurt her ear.
  Sudden laughter; the cry of an infant; the splash
  Of a tenant below in his bath-tub; the crash
  Of strong hands on a keyboard above, and the light,
  Merry voice of the lady who lived opposite,
  The air intertwined in a tangled sound ball,
  And flung straight at her ear through the court and the hall.
  Ah, what loneliness dwelt in the rush and the stir
  Of the great pushing throngs that were nothing to her,
  And to whom she was nothing!  Her heart, on its quest
  For distraction, seemed eating itself in her breast.
  She longed for a comrade, a friend.  In the church
  Which she frequented no one abetted her search,
  For the faces of people she met in its aisle
  Gazed calmly beyond her, without glance or smile.
  The look in their eyes, when translated, read thus,
  "We worship God here, what are people to us?"
  In some masculine eyes she read more, it is true.
  What she read made her gaze at the floor of her pew.
  The blithe little blonde who lived over the hall,
  In the opposite rooms, was the first one to call
  Or to show friendly feeling.  She seemed sweet and kind,
  But her infantile face hid a mercantile mind.
  Her voice had the timbre of metal.  Each word
  Clinked each word like small change in a purse; and you heard,
  In the rustling silk of her skirts, just a hint
  Of new bills freshly printed and right from the mint.
  There was that in her airs and her chatter which made
  Zoe question and ponder, and turn half afraid
  From her proffers of friendship.  When one July day
  The fair neighbor called for a moment to say,
  "I am off to Long Branch for the summer, good-bye,"
  Zoe seemed to breathe freer--she scarcely knew why,
  But she reasoned it out as alone in the gloom
  Of the soft summer evening she sat in her room.
  "The woman is happy," she said; "at the least,
  Her heart is not starving in life's ample feast.
  She lives while she lives, but I only exist,
  And Fate laughs in my face for the things I resist."
  New York in the midsummer seems like the gay
  Upper servant who rules with the mistress away.
  She entertains friends from all parts of the earth;
  Her streets are alive with a fictitious mirth.
  She flaunts her best clothes with a devil-may-care
  Sort of look, and her parks wear a riotous air.
  There is something unwholesome about her at dusk;
  Her trees, and her gardens, seem scented with musk;
  And you feel she has locked up the door of the house
  And, half drunk with the heat, wanders forth to carouse,
  With virtue, ambition and industry all
  Packed off (moth-protected) with garments for Fall.
  Zoe felt out of step with the town.  In the song
  Which it sang, where each note was a soul of the throng,
  She seemed the one discord.  Books gave no distraction.
  She cared not for study, her heart longed for action,
  For pleasure, excitement.  Wild impulses, new
  To her mind, came like demons and urged her to do
  All sorts of mad things.  Mischief breathed through the air.
  One could do as one liked in New York--who would care--
  Who would know save the God who had left her alone
  In his world, unprotected, unloved?  From her own
  Restless mind and sick heart she attempted once more
  To escape.  One reads much of gay life at the shore--
  Narragansett, she fancied, would suit her.  The sea
  Would at least prove a friend; and, perchance, there might be
  Some heart, like her own, seeking comradeship there.
  The days brought no friend.  But the moist, salty air
  Was a stimulant, giving existence new charms.
  The sea was a lover who opened his arms
  Every day to embrace her.  And life in this place
  Held something of pleasure, and sweetness and grace,
  Though the eyes of the men were too ardent and bold,
  And the eyes of the women suspicious and cold,
  She yet had the sea--the sea, strong and mighty,
  Both father and mother of fair Aphrodite. _ 
                 
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