Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
France: Vols. IX–X. 1876–79.
Thoughts at the Grave of Eloisa and Abelard, in Père la Chaise
By Julia Ward Howe (18191910)F
Thy glowing breast contained in marble death,
While Love’s soft planet on thy brow is shining,
A sister heart to thine would lend its breath.
The form that might not pass the convent grate,
And gather that the happiness denied thee
On earth makes blessed thine immortal state.
Nor as the glorious sibyl of despair;
But as the nun, when deeper voices woke thee
From thy wild fever-dream to toil and prayer.
And here begins to mine thy spirit’s mission:
How fared it with thee, in thy cloister cell?
Did heaven console thee with its dreams elysian,
Or felt thy plundered heart the flames of hell?
And left thee stunned and swooning, faint and dull,
How did thy garb of holiness become thee?
Was it ennobling? was it weariful?
Or smiled they mournfully on thy retreat?
Hadst thou repose after a fate so changeful?
Did God’s dear love make expiation sweet?
Like a bent bow, of its own tension break;
Or did the chaos of thy thoughts grow plastic,
And from the hand divine new moulding take?
Thy wildered mind its task austere pursued,
Scourged on by conscience, driven back by sorrow,
A Queen of Phantoms, ruling solitude.