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The Husband's Part

 

The wife yields all up to the husband, gives herself in the fullest, most complete sense. Will he be faithful to the holy trust reposed in his hands? Will he love her with an undecaying love? Will he shelter her from the blast and protect her in the day of peril? Will he cherish her happiness as a precious jewel, bearing all things, enduring all things, for her sake? Will he seek her highest good; help her to build up in herself the noblest womanhood? Is her worthy to receive into his keeping all that her confiding love lays at his feet? Will he be true to his trust for ever?

Miss Procter has put these words into the lips of an expectant bride – “A Woman’s Question:”

“Before I trust my fate to thee,
Or place my hand in thine;
Before I let thy future give
Color and form to mine;
Before I peril all for thee,
Question thy soul tonight for me.

“I break all slighter bonds, nor feel
A shadow of regret;
Is there one link within the past
That holds thy spirit yet?
Or is thy faith as clear and free
As that which I can pledge to thee?

“Does there within my dimmest dreams
A possible future shine,
Wherein thy life could henceforth breathe,
Untouched, unshared by mine?
If so, at any pain or cost,
Oh tell me before all is lost.

“Look deeper still. If thou canst feel
Within thy inmost soul
That thou hast kept a portion back,
While I have staked the whole,
Let no false pity spare the blow
But in true mercy tell me so.

“Is there within thy heart a need
That mine cannot fulfill?
One chord that any other hand
Could better wake or still?
Speak now–lest at some future day
My whole life wither and decay.

“Lives there within thy nature hid
The demon spirit Change,
Shedding a passing glory still
On all things new and strange?–
It may not be thy fault alone–
But shield my heart against thine own.

“Couldst thou withdraw thy hand one day
And answer to my claim
That Fate and that today’s mistake–
Not thou–had been to blame?
Some soothe their conscience thus; but thou
Wilt surely warn and save me now.”

It is a solemn thing for any man to assume such a trust and take a life, a gentle, delicate, confiding young life, into his keeping, to cherish, to shelter, to bless, until death either takes the trust out of his hands or strikes him down.

 

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