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AURORA LEIGH.
And glide along the churchyard like a bride,
While all the dead keep whispering through the withes,
‘You would be better in your place with us,
‘You pitiful corruption!’ At the thought,
The damps break out on me like leprosy,
Although I’m clean. Ay, clean as Marian Erle:
As Marian Leigh, I know, I were not clean:
I have not so much life that I should love,
. . Except the child. Ah God! I could not bear
To see my darling on a good man’s knees,
And know by such a look, or such a sigh,
Or such a silence, that he thought sometimes,
‘This child was fathered by some cursed wretch' . .
For, Romney,—angels are less tender-wise
Than God and mothers: even you would think
What we think never. He is ours, the child;
And we would sooner vex a soul in heaven
By coupling with it the dead body’s thought,
It left behind it in a last month’s grave,
Than, in my child, see other than . . my child.
We only, never call him fatherless
Who has God and his mother. O my babe,
My pretty, pretty blossom, an ill-wind
Once blew upon my breast! can any think
I’d have another,—one called happier,
A fathered child, with father’s love and race
That’s worn as bold and open as a smile,
To vex my darling when he’s asked his name
And has no answer? What! a happier child
Than mine, my best,—who laughed so loud to-night