Englishwoman's Love Letters - Page 15/59

How it puzzles me that, when love is perfect, there should be

disappearances and reappearances: and faces now and then showing a

change!--You, actually, the last time you came, looking a day older than

the day before! What was it? Had old age blown you a kiss, or given you a

wrinkle in the art of dying? Or had you turned over some new leaf, and

found it withered on the other side?

I could not see how it was: I heard you coming--it was spring! The door

opened:--oh, it was autumnal! One day had fallen away like a leaf out of

my forest, and I had not been there to see it go!

At what hour of the twenty-four does a day shed itself out of our lives?

Not, I think, on the stroke of the clock, at midnight, or at cock-crow.

Some people, perhaps, would say--with the first sleep; and that the

"beauty-sleep" is the new day putting out its green wings. I think it

must be not till something happens to make the new day a stronger

impression than the last. So it would please me to think that your

yesterday dropped off as you opened the door; and that, had I peeped and

seen you coming up the stairs, I should have seen you looking a day

younger.

That means that you age at the sight of me! I think you do. I, I feel

a hundred on the road to immortality, directly your face dawns on me.

There's a foot gone over my grave! The angel of the resurrection with his

mouth pursed fast to his trumpet!--Nothing else than the gallop-a-gallop

of your horse:--it sounds like a kettle boiling over!

So this goes into hiding: listens to us all the while we talk; and comes

out afterwards with all its blushes stale, to be rouged up again and

sent off the moment your back is turned. No, better!--to be slipped into

your pocket and carried home to yourself by yourself. How, when you

get to your destination and find it, you will curse yourself that you

were not a speedier postman!