<SPAN name="chap077"></SPAN>
<h3> THE RISING OF THE CURTAIN </h3>
<p class="poem">
We sit before the curtain, and we heed the pleasant bustle:<br/>
The ushers hastening up the aisles, the fans' and programmes' rustle;<br/>
The boy that cries librettos, and the soft, incessant sound<br/>
Of talking and low laughter that buzzes all around.<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
How very old the drop-scene looks! A thousand times before<br/>
I've seen that blue paint dashing on that red distemper shore;<br/>
The castle and the guazzo sky, the very ilex-tree,—<br/>
They have been there a thousand years,—a thousand more shall be.<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
All our lives we have been waiting for that weary daub to rise;<br/>
We have peeped behind its edges, "as if we were God's spies;"<br/>
We have listened for the signal; yet still, as in our youth,<br/>
The colored screen of matter hangs between us and the truth.<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
When in my careless childhood I dwelt beside a wood,<br/>
I tired of the clearing where my father's cabin stood;<br/>
And of the wild young forest paths that coaxed me to explore,<br/>
Then dwindled down, or led me back to where I stood before.<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
But through the woods before our door a wagon track went by,<br/>
Above whose utmost western edge there hung an open sky;<br/>
And there it seemed to make a plunge, or break off suddenly,<br/>
As though beneath that open sky it met the open sea.<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
Oh, often have I fancied, in the sunset's dreamy glow,<br/>
That mine eyes had caught the welter of the ocean waves below;<br/>
And the wind among the pine-tops, with its low and ceaseless roar,<br/>
Was but an echo from the surf on that imagined shore.<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
Alas! as I grew older, I found that road led down<br/>
To no more fair horizon than the squalid factory town:<br/>
So all life's purple distances, when nearer them I came,<br/>
Have played me still the same old cheat,—the same, the same, the same!<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
And when, O King, the heaven departeth as a scroll,<br/>
Wilt thou once more the promise break thou madest to my soul?<br/>
Shall I see thy feasting presence thronged with baron, knight, and page?<br/>
Or will the curtain rise upon a dark and empty stage?<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
For lo, quick undulations across the canvas run;<br/>
The foot-lights brighten suddenly, the orchestra has done;<br/>
And through the expectant silence rings loud the prompter's bell;<br/>
The curtain shakes,—it rises. Farewell, dull world, farewell!<br/></p>
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