Nathaniel Parker Willis

The Declaration

   ’Twas late, and the gay company was gone,
   And the light lay soft on the deserted room
   From alabaster vases, and a scent
   Of orange leaves, and sweet verbena came
   Through the unshutter’d window on the air,
   And the rich pictures with their dark old tints
   Hung like a twilight landscape, and all things
   Seem’d hush;d into a slumber. Isabel,
   The dark-eyed, spiritual Isabel
   Was leaning on her harp, and I had stay’d
   To whisper what I could not when the crowd
   Hung on her look like worshippers. I knelt,
   And with the fervor of a lip unused
   To the cool breath of reason, told my love.
   There was no answer, and I took the hand
   That rested on the strings, and press’d a kiss
   Upon it unforbidden, and again
   Besought her, that this silent evidence
   That I was not indifferent to her heart,
   Might have the seal of one sweet syllable.
   I kiss’d the small white fingers as I spoke,
   And she withdrew them gently, and upraised
   Her forehead from its resting place, and look’d
   Earnestly on me, She had been asleep
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