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Two Letters to a Friend

O LOVE, my love ! if I no more should see Thyself,
nor on the earth the shadow of thee,
Nor image of thine eyes in any spring,—
How then should sound upon Life’s darkening slope
The ground-whirl of the perished leaves of Hope,
The wind of Death’s imperishable wing ?


            D. G. R.



Letter I.—After the Wedding

BRIGHT-BROWED as Summer’s self who claspt the land—
With eyes like English skies, where seemed to play
    Deep azure dreams behind the tender grey—
All light and love, she moved : I see her stand
Beneath that tree ; I see the happy band
    Of bridesmaids on the lawn where blossoms sway
    In light so rare it seems as if the day
Glowed conscious of the future’s golden strand.

O Friend, if sun and wind and flowers and birds
In language deeper drawn than human words

                                                From

                        334 Two Letters to a Friend

    From deeper founts than Time shall e’er destroy,
All spoke to thee in Summer’s rich caress,
Even so my heart, though wordless too, could bless :
    It could but feel a joy to know thy joy.




Letter II.—After Death’s Mockery

When Death from out the dark, by one blind blow,
    Strikes down Love’s heart of hearts—severs a life—
    Cleaves it in twain as by a sudden knife,
Leaving the dreadful Present, dumb with woe,
Mocked by a Past whose rainbow-skies aglow
    O’erarch Love’s bowers where all his flowers seem rife
    In bloom of one sweet loving girl and wife—
Then Friendship’s voice must whisper, whisper low.

Though well I know ’tis thou who dost inherit
Heroic blood and faith that lends the spirit
    Strength known to souls like thine of noblest strain,
Comfort I dare not proffer. What relief
Shall Friendship proffer Love in such wild grief?
    I can but suffer pain to know thy pain :

I can but suffer pain ; and yet to me
    Returns that day whose light seemed heavenly light,
    Whose breath seemed incense rising to unite
That lawn—where every flower, and bird and bee

                                                Seemed

                        By Theodore Watts 335

Seemed loving her who shone beneath that tree—
    With lawns far off whose flower of higher delight
    Behind Death’s icy peaks and fens of night
Bloomed ‘neath a heaven her eyes, not ours, could see.

Brother, did Nature mock us with that glory
Which seemed to prophesy Love’s rounded story ?
    Or was it, that sweet Summer’s fond device
To show thee who shall stand on Eden slopes,
Where bloom the broken buds of earthly hopes—
    Stand waiting ‘neath a tree of Paradise ?

MLA citation:

Watts, Theodore. “Two Letters to a Friend.” The Yellow Book, vol. 6, July 1895, pp. 333-335. Yellow Book Digital Edition, edited by Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2020. https://1890s.ca/YBV6_watts_two/