Part 9 (2/2)

What seeks the tossing throng, As it wheels and whirls along?

On! on! the l.u.s.tres Like h.e.l.lstars bicker: Let us twine in closer cl.u.s.ters, On! on! ever closer and quicker!

How the silly things throb, throb amain!

Hence all quiet!

Hither riot!

Peal more proudly, Squeal more loudly, Ye cymbals, ye trumpets! bedull all pain, Till it laugh again.

Thou beckonest to me, beauty's daughter; Smiles ripple o'er thy lips, And o'er thine eye's blue water; O let me breathe on thee, Ere parted hence we flee, Ere aught that light eclipse!

I know that beauty's flowers soon wither: Those lips, within whose rosy cells Thy spirit warbles its sweet spells, Death's clammy kiss ere long will press together.

I know, that face so fair and full Is but a masquerading skull: But hail to thee skull so fair and so fres.h.!.+

Why should I weep and whine and wail, That what blooms now must soon grow pale, And that worms must batten on that sweet flesh?

Let me laugh but today and tomorrow, And what care I for sorrow, While thus on the waves of the dance by each other we sail?

Now thou art mine, And I am thine: And what though pain and trouble wait To seize thee at the gate, And sob, and tear, and groan, and sigh, Stand ranged in state On thee to fly, Blithely let us look and cheerily On death that grins so drearily!

What would grief with us, or anguish?

They are foes that we know how to vanquish.

I press thine answering fingers, Thy look upon me lingers, Or the fringe of thy garment will waft me a kiss: Thou rollest on in light; I fall back into night; Even despair is bliss.

From this delight, From this wild revel's surge Perchance there may emerge Foul jealousy, and scorn, and envious spite.

But this is our glory and pride; When thee I despise, I turn but my eyes, And the fair one beside thee will welcome my gaze, And she is my bride!

O happy, happy maze!

Or shall it be her neighbour?

Whose eyes, like a sabre, Flash and pierce, Their glance is so fierce.

Thus jumping and prancing, All together go dancing Adown life's giddy cave; Nor living, nor loving, But dizzily roving Through dreams to a grave.

There below 'tis yet worse: Earth's flowers and its clay Roof a gloomier day, Hide a still deeper curse.

Ring then, ye cymbals, enliven this dream!

Ye horns shout a fiercer, more vulture-like scream!

And frisk caper skip prance dance yourselves out of breath!

For your life is all art, Love has given you no heart: So hurrah till you plunge into bottomless death.

He had ended, and was standing by the window. Then she came into the opposite chamber, lovely, as he had never yet seen her: her brown hair floated freely, and played in wanton ringlets about the whitest of necks; she was but lightly clad, and seemed as if she meant to finish some little household matters at this late hour of the night before she went to bed: for she placed two candles in two corners of the room, set the green cloth on the table to rights, and withdrew again.

Emilius was still sunk in his sweet dreams, and gazing on the image which his beloved had left in his mind, when to his horrour the frightful, the scarlet old woman walkt through the chamber: the gold on her head and breast glared ghastlily as it threw back the light.

She had vanisht again. Was he to believe his eyes? Was it not some delusive phantom of the night that his own feverish imagination had conjured up before him?

But no! she returned, still more hideous than before, with a long grey and black mane flying wildly and haggardly about her breast and back.

The beauteous maiden followed her, pale, stiff; her lovely bosom was all bared, but her whole form was like a marble statue.

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