Amata.

Who has not known Amata,1
                        
                        And bowed him to her thrall,2
                        
                        The despot of the drawing-room,3
                        
                        The peerless of the ball ?4
                        Amata looked, and longed for5
                        
                        Three seasons now or so,6
                        
                        ’Neath pertest hat the brightest face7
                        
                        At noontide in the Row ?8
                        She moves in graceful glory by,9
                        
                        She glistens through the dance,10
                        
                        The cynosure of every wish,11
                        
                        The aim of every glance,12
                        In such a light of loveliness13
                        
                        As crushes to eclipse14
                        
                        The sheen of wreathèd bandeaux,15
                        
                        The swim of silken slips.16
                        The proudest forms bend round her17
                        
                        In homage to her will ;18
                        
                        Still she is woo’d Amata,19
                        
                        Unwon Amata still.20
                        I wonder, in the dawning21
                        
                        When she is borne away,22
                        
                        And early sparrows chirp along23
                        
                        Her partner’s homeward way,24
                        When he checks the music-memories25
                        
                        To think of her between26
                        
                        The refrain of  “ Dinorah”27
                        
                        And the ripple of  “ Lurline,”—28
                        I wonder if a conscience smite29
                        
                        That eligible swain,30
                        
                        How wild his least ambition were,31
                        
                        His lightest hope how vain !32
                        For, if I read Amata right,33
                        
                        (I often think I do,)34
                        
                        The curling of her dainty lip,35
                        
                        The fair cheek’s changeless hue ;36
                        The listless hand on proffered arm,37
                        
                        The guile of soft replies,38
                        
                        With restless face averted39
                        
                        To dazzle other eyes ;40
                        
Ill is the augury I spell41
                        
                        Of feeling or of force42
                        
                        To train the tide of power and pride43
                        
                        In love’s submissive course ;44
                        And dim, and dark, and doubtful45
                        
                        Is figured to my view46
                        
                        That future friendship loves to trace,47
                        
                        Dear little girls, for you.48
                        On, on in bright procession49
                        
                        The pretty votaries pass ;50
                        
                        I read the fate of years to come51
                        
                        In Fancy’s magic glass.52
                        On many a fold of soft brown hair53
                        
                        And pure unfretted brow54
                        
                        The matron’s tiar rests as light55
                        
                        As girlhood’s roses now.56
                        Northward on some broad manor57
                        
                        Fair Edith’s lot is set ;58
                        
                        At Stanhope Gate some fortunate59
                        
                        Has throned his sweet Annette ;60
                        Lucy, whose bloom is rather full,61
                        
                        And Jane, who’s far too pale,62
                        
                        Have flutter’d in the orange-wreath,63
                        
                        And trembled ’neath the veil ;64
                        And bells peal high against the sky65
                        
                        O’er street and silent plain,66
                        
                        But I listen for thy wedding-chime,67
                        
                        Amata, all in vain.68
                        Town lavishes its dusty charms,69
                        
                        And Cowes its freshening sea ;70
                        
                        Here Fashion spreads its parquets smooth,71
                        
                        Its white decks there for thee ;72
                        And still before that costly shrine73
                        
                        Heart, hand, and hope are laid ;—74
                        
                        Unmelted still the haughty look,75
                        
                        The tender word unsaid !76
                        Go, colder than the glacier,77
                        
                        And loftier than the Alps—78
                        
                        Go, treasuring the bleeding hearts,79
                        
                        As Indians treasure scalps !80
                        With freedom all so loveable,81
                        
                        And flirting all so sweet,82
                        
                        And myriad vassals to subdue,83
                        
                        And myriad at thy feet,84
                        There must be—conquest’s current yet85
                        
                        So silverly flows on—86
                        
                        There must be ample time to yield,87
                        
                        And leisure to be won.—88
                        Not so, if truth the poet years89
                        
                        In constant cadence sing,90
                        
                        That Autumn’s fondest sunshine91
                        
                        Unfolds no buds of Spring.92
                        He will not linger near us93
                        
                        Neglected and content,94
                        
                        The baby-boy from Paphos95
                        
                        With bow for ever bent.96
                        We may not furl his pinion97
                        
                        To serve us at our will,98
                        
                        When all the happy lovelight pales99
                        
                        And all the soul grows chill.100
                        Ah me, ah me !  a future101
                        
                        Is drear upon my glass !102
                        
                        I see the dimples deepening,103
                        
                        I see the bright bloom pass ;104
                        See, one by one, how fickle youth105
                        
                        Suffers, and wakes, and thinks,106
                        
                        And breaks the rosy fetter,107
                        
                        And casts aside the links.108
                        More laboured swells the toilette,109
                        
                        More studied gleams the smile,110
                        
                        Like moonlight on the tracery111
                        
                        Of some forsaken pile.112
                        And comes the tide then freighted113
                        
                        With worship now no more ?114
                        
                        And is there mocking on the sea115
                        
                        At mourning on the shore ?116
                        The supple knee has vanished,117
                        
                        The pleading voice is mute,118
                        
                        Unculled the flower of flattery,119
                        
                        Unstrung the lover’s lute :120
                        And desolate Amata,121
                        
                        Like some discrownèd queen,122
                        
                        Sits sorrowing for the empire lost,123
                        
                        And the glories that have been.124