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WITH A SEASHELL

James Russell Lowell

Shell, whose lips, than mine more cold,

Might with Dian's ear make bold,

Seek my Lady's; if thou win

To that portal, shut from sin,

Where commissioned angels' swords

Startle back unholy words,

Thou a miracle shalt see

Wrought by it and wrought in thee;

Thou, the dumb one, shalt recover

Speech of poet, speech of lover.

If she deign to lift you there,

Murmur what I may not dare;

In that archway, pearly-pink

As the Dawn's untrodden brink,

Murmur, 'Excellent and good,

Beauty's best in every mood,

Never common, never tame,

Changeful fair as windwaved flame'--

Nay, I maunder; this she hears

Every day with mocking ears,

With a brow not sudden-stained

With the flush of bliss restrained,

With no tremor of the pulse

More than feels the dreaming dulse

In the midmost ocean's caves,

When a tempest heaps the waves.

Thou must woo her in a phrase

Mystic as the opal's blaze,

Which pure maids alone can see

When their lovers constant be.

I with thee a secret share,

Half a hope, and half a prayer,

Though no reach of mortal skill

Ever told it all, or will;

Say, 'He bids me--nothing more--

Tell you what you guessed before!'