Burlesques eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 581 pages of information about Burlesques.

Burlesques eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 581 pages of information about Burlesques.

“Quid me mollibus implicas lacertis, my Elinor?  Nay,” George added, a faint smile illumining his wan but noble features, “why speak to thee in the accents of the Roman poet, which thou comprehendest not?  Bright One, there be other things in Life, in Nature, in this Inscrutable Labyrinth, this Heart on which thou leanest, which are equally unintelligible to thee!  Yes, my pretty one, what is the Unintelligible but the Ideal? what is the Ideal but the Beautiful? what the Beautiful but the Eternal?  And the Spirit of Man that would commune with these is like Him who wanders by the thina poluphloisboio thalasses, and shrinks awe-struck before that Azure Mystery.”

Emily’s eyes filled with fresh-gushing dew.  “Speak on, speak ever thus, my George,” she exclaimed.  Barnwell’s chains rattled as the confiding girl clung to him.  Even Snoggin, the turnkey appointed to sit with the Prisoner, was affected by his noble and appropriate language, and also burst into tears.

“You weep, my Snoggin,” the Boy said; “and why?  Hath Life been so charming to me that I should wish to retain it? hath Pleasure no after-Weariness?  Ambition no Deception; Wealth no Care; and Glory no Mockery?  Psha!  I am sick of Success, palled of Pleasure, weary of Wine and Wit, and—­nay, start not, my Adelaide—­and Woman.  I fling away all these things as the Toys of Boyhood.  Life is the Soul’s Nursery.  I am a Man, and pine for the Illimitable!  Mark you me!  Has the Morrow any terrors for me, think ye?  Did Socrates falter at his poison?  Did Seneca blench in his bath?  Did Brutus shirk the sword when his great stake was lost?  Did even weak Cleopatra shrink from the Serpent’s fatal nip?  And why should I?  My great Hazard hath been played, and I pay my forfeit.  Lie sheathed in my heart, thou flashing Blade!  Welcome to my Bosom, thou faithful Serpent; I hug thee, peace-bearing Image of the Eternal!  Ha, the hemlock cup!  Fill high, boy, for my soul is thirsty for the Infinite!  Get ready the bath, friends; prepare me for the feast To-morrow—­bathe my limbs in odors, and put ointment in my hair.”

“Has for a bath,” Snoggin interposed, “they’re not to be ’ad in this ward of the prison; but I dussay Hemmy will git you a little hoil for your ’air.”

The Prisoned One laughed loud and merrily.  “My guardian understands me not, pretty one—­and thou? what sayest thou?  From those dear lips methinks—­plura sunt oscula quam sententiae—­I kiss away thy tears, dove!—­they will flow apace when I am gone, then they will dry, and presently these fair eyes will shine on another, as they have beamed on poor George Barnwell.  Yet wilt thou not all forget him, sweet one.  He was an honest fellow, and had a kindly heart for all the world said—­”

“That, that he had,” cried the gaoler and the girl in voices gurgling with emotion.  And you who read! you unconvicted Convict—­you murderer, though haply you have slain no one—­you Felon in posse if not in esse—­deal gently with one who has used the Opportunity that has failed thee—­and believe that the Truthful and the Beautiful bloom sometimes in the dock and the convict’s tawny Gabardine!

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Project Gutenberg
Burlesques from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.