The Poetry Corner

To A Belle.

By Nathaniel Parker Willis

All that thou art, I thrillingly And sensibly do feel; For my eye doth see, and my ear doth hear, And my heart is not of steel; I meet thee in the festal hall - I turn thee in the dance - And I wait, as would a worshipper, The giving of thy glance. Thy beauty is as undenied As the beauty of a star; And thy heart beats just as equally, Whate'er thy praises are; And so long without a parallel Thy loveliness hath shone, That, follow'd like the tided moon, Thou mov'st as calmly on. Thy worth I, for myself, have seen - I know that thou art leal; Leal to a woman's gentleness, And thine own spirit's weal; Thy thoughts are deeper than a dream, And holier than gay; And thy mind is a harp of gentle strings, Where angel fingers play. I know all this - I feel all this - And my heart believes it true; And my fancy hath often borne me on, As a lover's fancies do; And I have a heart, that is strong and deep, And would love with its human all, And it waits for a fetter that's sweet to wear, And would bound to a silken thrall. But it loves not thee. - It would sooner bind Its thoughts to the open sky; It would worship as soon a familiar star, That is bright to every eye. 'Twere to love the wind that is sweet to all - The wave of the beautiful sea - 'Twere to hope for all the light in Heaven, To hope for the love of thee. But wert thou lowly - yet leal as now; Rich but in thine own mind; Humble - in all but the queenly brow; And to thine own glory blind - Were the world to prove but a faithless thing, And worshippers leave thy shrine - My love were, then, but a gift for thee, And my strong deep heart were thine.