The Poetical Works of Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton, Bart. M.P. Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
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to his ear. In that sad night, when the young mother slept, Forth from his door the elder mourner crept; Absent for days, none knowing whither bent, Till back return'd abruptly as he went. With a swift tremulous stride he climb'd the stair, } Through the closed chamber gleam'd his silver hair, } And Mary heard his voice soft—pitying—as in prayer! } 'Child, child, I was too hard!—But woe is wild; Now I know all!—again I clasp my child!' Within his arms, upon his heart again His Mary lay, and strove for words in vain; She strove for words, but better spoke through tears The love the heart through silence vents and hears.

      "All this I gather'd from the nurse, who saw

       The scene, which dews from hireling eyes could draw;

       So far;—her sob the pastor heard, and turn'd,

       Waved his wan hand, nor what more chanced she learn'd.

      "Next morn in death the happier father lay,

       From sleep to Heaven his soul had pass'd away;

       He had but lived to pardon and to bless

       His child;—emotion kills in its excess,

       And that task done, why longer on the rack

       Stretch the worn frame?—God's mercy call'd him back.

       The day they buried him, while yet the strife

       Of sense and memory raged for death and life

       In Mary's shatter'd brain, her father's friend,

       Whose hand, perchance, had sped him to his end,

       Whose zeal officious had explored, reveal'd

       My name, the half, worse half, of all conceal'd,

       Sought her, and saw alone: When gone, a change

       Came o'er the victim, terrible and strange;

       All grief seem'd hush'd—a stern tranquillity

       Calm'd the wan brow and fix'd the glassy eye;

       She spoke not, moved not, wept not—on her breast

       Slept Earth's new stranger—not more deep its rest.

       They fear'd her in that mood—with noiseless tread

       Stole from the room; and, ere the morn, she fled.

       Gone the young Mother with her babe!—no trace;

       As the wind goes, she vanish'd from the place;

       They search'd the darkness of the wood, they pried

       Into the secrets of the tempting tide,

       In vain—unseen on earth as in the wave,

       Where life found refuge or despair a grave."

       "And is this all?" said Morvale—

       "No, my thought

       Guess'd at the clue; her father's friend I sought,

       A stern hard man, of Calvin's iron mould,

       And yet I moved him, and his tale he told.

       It seem'd (by me unmark'd), amidst the rest,

       My uncle's board had known this homely guest.

       Our evil star had led the guest, one day,

       Where through the lone glade wound our lovers' way,

       To view, with Age's hard, suspecting eyes,

       The high-born courtier in the student's guise.

       Thus, when the father, startled to vague fears,

       By his child's waning cheek and unrevealing tears,

       First to his brother priest for counsel came,

       He urged stern question—track'd the grief to shame,

       Guess'd the undoer, and disclosed the name.

      "Time went—the priest had still a steady trust

       In Mary's honour; but, to mine unjust,

       Divined some fraud—explored, and found a clue,

       There had been marriage, if the rites were due;

       Had learn'd Clanalbin's name, as one whose eye

       Had seen, whose witness might attest the tie.

       This news to Mary's father was convey'd

       The eve her infant on her heart was laid.

      "That night he left his home, he did not rest

       Till found Clanalbin—'Well, and he confess'd?'

       I cried impatient;—my informer's eye

       Flash'd fire—'Confess'd the fraud,' was his reply.

       'The fraud!'—'The impious form, the vile disguise!

       Mock priest, false marriage, hell's whole woof of lies!'

       'Lies!—had the sound earth open'd its abyss

       Beneath my feet, my soul had shudder'd less.

       Lies!—but not mine!—his own!—not mine such ill.

       O wife, I fly—to right, avenge, and claim thee still!'"

       "Thy hand—I wrong'd thee," Morvale falter'd, while

       His strong heart heaved—"Thou didst avenge the guile?

       Thou found'st thy friend—thy witness—well! and he?"—

       "Had spoken truth, the truth of perfidy.

       This man had loved me in his own dark way,

       Loved for past kindness in our wilder day,

       Loved for the future, which, obscure for him,

       Link'd with my fate, with that grew bright or dim.

       I told thee how he warr'd with my intent,

       The strong dissuasion, and the slow consent:

       The slow consent but veil'd the labour'd wile;

       That I might yet be great, he grovell'd to be vile.

       'Twas a false Hymen—a mock priest—and she The pure, dishonour'd—the dishonourer free!

      "This then the tale that, while it snapp'd the chord,

       Still to the father's heart the child restored;

       This told to her by the hard zealot's tongue,

       Had the last hope from spoil'd existence wrung;

       Had driven the outcast through the waste to roam,

       And with the altar shatter'd ev'n the home.

       No! trust ev'n then—ev'n then, hope, was not o'er:

       One morn the wanderer reach'd Clanalbin's door.

       O steadfast saint! amidst the lightning's scathe,

       Still to the anchor clung the lingerer Faith;

       Still through the tempest of a darken'd brain,

       Where misery gnaw'd and memory rack'd in vain,

       The last lone angel that deserts the grief

       Of noble souls, survived and smiled—Belief!

       There had she come, herself myself to know,

       And bow'd the head, and waited for the blow!

       What matter how the villain soothed, or sought

       To mask the crime?—enough that it was wrought;

       She heard in silence—when all said, all learn'd,

       Still silent linger'd; then a flush return'd

       To the pale cheek—the Woman and the Wrong

       Rear'd the light form—the voice came clear and strong.

       'Tell him my father's grave is closed; the dread

       Of shame sleeps with him—dying with the dead:

       Tell him on earth we meet no more;—in vain