A little bird flew To the top of a tree: The sky it was blue, And the bird sang to me.
So tender and true was the strain The singer, I hoped, would remain; O little bird, stay and prolong The rapture the grief of that song!
A little thought came, Came out of my heart; It whispered a name That made me to start:
And the rose-colored breath of my sigh Flushed the earth and the sea and the sky. Delay, little thought! O, delay, And gladden my life with thy ray!
“Such singing lured Ulysses to the rocks!” Old Lothian said, applauding. “Charles, look out, Or, ere we reck of it, this reckless siren Will have us all a wreck on Norman's Woe.
See to your oars!— Where are we drifting, man?” “Who would not drift on such a night as this?” Said Charles; “all's right.” Then, heading for the Cove, Slowly and steadily the rowers pulled.
But, when the moon shone crescent in the west, And the faint outline of the part obscured Thread-like curved visible from horn to horn,— And Jupiter, supreme among the orbs,
And Mars, with rutilating beam, came forth, And the great concave opened like a flower, Unfolding firmaments and galaxies, Sparkling with separate stars, or snowy white
With undistinguishable suns beyond,— They paused and rested on their oars again, And looked around,— in adoration looked. For, gazing on the inconceivable,
They felt God is, though inconceivable;— And, while they mutely worshipped, suddenly A change came over Linda's countenance, And her glazed mortal eyes were functionless;
For there, before her in the boat, stood two Unbidden, not unwelcome passengers, Her father and her mother.... “Why, Miss Linda,
Wake! Are you sleeping? What has been the matter? Here we've been waiting for you full five minutes. And I have called, and Mr. Lothian He too has called, and yet you make no answer!”
“Rachel! What is it? There! Excuse me all, If I seemed impolite. Now, then, I'm ready. A strong pull shall it be? So! Let her dart!” And in ten minutes they were at the landing
And on their homeward way; and, as they parted, The spoils were shared, and the old man accepted One of the baskets, and all cried, “Good night!” The morning sea-fog like an incense rose
Up to the sun and perished in his beam; The sky's blue promise brightened through the veil. With her unopened sketch-book in her hand, Linda stood on the summit looking down
On Norman's Woe, and felt upon her brow The cooling haze that foiled the August heat. Near her knelt Rachel, hunting curiously For the fine purple algæ of the clefts.
Good cause had Linda for a cheerful heart; For had she not that day received by mail A copy of “The Prospect of the Flowers,” — Published in chromo, and these words from Diggin?
“Your future is assured: my bait is swallowed, Bait, hook, and sinker, all; now let our fish Have line enough and time enough for play, And we will land him safely by and by.
A good fat fish he is, and thinks he's cunning. Enclosed you'll find a hundred-dollar bill; Please send me a receipt. Keep very quiet.” Yet Linda was not altogether happy.
Why was it that Charles Lothian had called Once, and once only, after their adventure? Called just to ask her, How she found herself? And, Did she overtask herself in rowing?
How happened it, in all her walks and rambles, They rarely met, or, if they met, a bow Formal and cold was all the interview? While thus she mused, she started at a cry:
“Ah! here's our siren, cumbent on the rocks! Where should a siren be, if not on rocks?” Old Lothian's voice! He came with rod and line To try an angler's luck. Behind him stepped
Charles, who stood still, as if arrested, when He noticed Linda. Then, as if relenting In some resolve, he jumped from rock to rock
To where she leaned; and, greeting her, inquired: “Have you been sketching?” — “No, for indolence Is now my occupation.” — “Here's a book; May I not look at it?” — “You may.” — “Is this
An album?” — “‘ Tis my sketch-book.” — “Do you mean These are your sketches, and original?” “Ay, truly, mine; from nature every one.” “But here we have high art! No amateur
Could color flower like that.” — “Ah! there you touch me; For I'm no amateur in painting flowers,— I get my living by it.” — “I could praise That sea-view also,— what a depth of sky!
That beach,— that schooner flying from a squall,— If I'm a judge, here's something more than skill!” Then the discourse slid off to woman's rights; For Lothian held a newspaper which told
Of some convention, the report of which Might raise a smile. One of the lady speakers, It seems, would give her sex the privilege Of taking the initiative in wooing,
If so disposed! “Indeed, why not?” cried Linda. “Indeed, you almost take my breath away With your Why not, Miss Percival! Why not?”
“Yes, I repeat,— if so disposed, why not? For why should woman any more than man Play the dissembler, with so much at stake? I know the ready taunt that here will rise:
‘ Already none too backward are our girls In husband-seeking.’ Seeking in what way? Seeking by stratagem and management,— Not by frank, honest means! What food for mirth
‘ Twould give to shallow men to see a woman Court the relation, intertwined with all Of purest happiness that she may crave,— The ties of wife and mother! O, what pointing,
Sneering, and joking! And yet why should care Thoughtful and pure and wisely provident, That Nature's sacred prompting shall not fail, Be one thing for a man, and quite another
For her, the woman? Why this flimsy mask? This playing of a part, put on to suit, Not the heart's need, but Fashion custom-bound? Feigning we must be sought, and never seek?
Now, through these social hindrances and bars, The bold, perhaps the intriguing, carry off Prizes the true and modest ought to win. And so we hear it coarsely said of husbands,
‘ Better a poor one far, than none at all!’ A thought ignoble, and which no true woman Should harbor for a moment. Give her freedom, Freedom to seek, and she'll not harbor it!
Because if woman, equally with man, Were privileged thus, she would discriminate Much more than now, and fewer sordid unions Would be the sure result. For what if man
Were chained to singleness until some woman Might seek his hand in marriage, would he be Likely as now to make a wise election? Would he not say,‘ Time flies; my chances lessen
And I must plainly take what I can get?’ True, there are mercenary men enough, Seeking rich dowries; they'd find fewer dupes, Were women free as men to seek and choose,
Banish the senseless inequality, And you make marriage less a vulgar game In which one tries to circumvent the other. Oh! all this morbid ribaldry of men,
And all this passive imbecility, And superstitious inactivity, Dissimulation and improvidence, False shame and lazy prejudice of women,
Where the great miracle of sex concerns us, And Candor should be innocently wise, And Knowledge should be reverently free,— Is against nature,— helps to hide the way
Out of the social horrors that confound us, And launches thousands into paths impure, Shutting them out from holy parentage.” “I hold,” said Charles, “the question is not one
Of reasoning, but of simple sentiment. As it would shock me, should a woman speak In virile baritone, so would I shudder To hear a grave proposal marriageward
In alto or soprano.” “‘ Twould depend! Depend on love,” said Linda; “love potential, Or present.” — “Nay,‘ twould frighten love!” cried Charles,—
“Kill it outright.” — “Then would it not be love! What! would you love a woman less because She durst avow her love, before the cue Had been imparted by your lordly lips?
Rare love would that be truly which could freeze Because the truth came candid from her heart, And in advance of the proprieties!” “But may the woman I could love,” cried Charles,
“Forbear at least the rash experiment!” “I doubt,” said Linda, “if you know your heart; For hearts look to the substance, not the form. Why should not woman seek her happiness
With brow as unabashed as man may wear In seeking his? Ah! lack of candor here Works more regrets, for woman and for man, Than we can reckon. Let but woman feel
That in the social scheme she's not a cipher, The remedy, be sure, is not far off.” “To me it seems,” said Lothian, “that you war Against our natural instincts: have they not
Settled the point, even as the world has done?” Said Linda: “Instincts differ; they may be Results of shallow prejudice or custom. The Turk will tell you that polygamy
Is instinct; and the savage who stalks on In dirty painted grandeur, while his squaw Carries the burdens, might reply that instinct Regulates that. So instinct proves too much.
Queens and great heiresses are privileged To intimate their matrimonial choice,— Simply because superiority In power or riches gives an apt excuse:
Let a plurality of women have The wealth and power, and you might see reversed What now you call an instinct. When a higher Civilization shall make woman less
Dependent for protection and support On man's caprice or pleasure, there may be A higher sort of woman; one who shall Feel that her lot is more in her own hands,
And she, like man, a free controlling force, Not a mere pensioner on paternal bounty Until some sultan throws the handkerchief.” A cry of triumph from the fisherman,
Exuberant at having caught a bass, Here ended the discussion, leaving Linda With the last word. Charles went to chat with Rachel; And Linda, summoned by vociferations
From the excited, the transported captor, Descended to inspect the amazing fish. “A beauty, is it not, Miss Percival? A rare one, too, for this part of the coast!
‘ Twill be a study how to have it cooked. Now sit here, in the shadow of this rock. Your father's name was Albert Percival? So I supposed. I've often heard my wife
Speak of him as of one she knew was wronged Most foully in his wrestle with the law. Have you not met with Harriet Percival?” “Once only, and our interview was brief.
Is she not married?” — “No, nor like to be, Although her fortune is a pretty one, Even for these times,— two millions, I believe; All which her mother may inherit soon;
For Harriet is an invalid, but hoards Her income quite as thriftily as if She looked for progeny and length of days. The mother, as you may not be aware,
Has married an aspiring gentleman Who means to build a palace on the Hudson, And Harriet's money hence is greatly needed.” The mist now cleared, and the sun shone in power,
So that the heat soon drove them to the woods. The senior took his capture home for dinner; Rachel strolled, picking berries by the brook; And, under lofty pines, sat Charles and Linda,
And talked discursively, till Linda's thoughts, Inclining now to memory, now to hope, Vibrating from the future to the past, Took, in a silent mood, this rhythmic form.
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