Love's Wounding

As the young stag, when lusty Spring supreme
O'er Winter's biting cold at last prevails,
To crop the honeyed leafage seeks new trails
And leaves his dear retreat at dawn's first gleam;

Alone, secure, afar (as he may deem)
From bay of hounds, or hunters' echoing hails,
Now on the mountain-slopes, now in the vales,
Now by the waters of a secret stream,

He wantons freely, at his own sweet will,
Knowing no fear of net or bow, until,
Pierced with one dart, he lies dead in his pride —

Even Unto Death

To think one thought a hundred hundred ways,
'Neath two loved eyes to lay your heart quite bare,
To drink the bitter liquor of despair
And eat forever ashes of lost days—

In spirit and flesh to know youth's bloom decays,
To die of pain, yet swear no pain is there,
The more you sue, to move the less your fair,
Yet make her wish, the law your life obeys—

Anger that passes, faith that cannot move;
Far dearer than yourself your foe to love;
To build a thousand vain imaginings,

A Prayer in the Dark

Maker of love and longing!
Thou fountain of our tears!
When in one night come thronging
The memories of years,
God of the fallen sparrow!
God of the mateless dove!
Give to her lonely sorrow
The solace of Thy love.

Jamaica Lake

Soft-waving sheet of water! When a boy,
My heart responded to thy look of joy;
'Twas my delight to sit upon thy shore,
And hear thy billows breaking at my feet;
Not, like the ocean's, with incessant roar,
But, like a sea-shell, low-voiced, hushed and sweet.
'Twas my delight from the uprising hill —
The great sun sinking in the crimson west —
To gaze across thy scarcely-ruffled breast,
On those dark pines that rise in grandeur still,
As high, as graceful, and as richly green,
As when in youth I loved the lovely scene.

Song

As I lay in the early sun,
Stretched in the grass, I thought upon
My true love, my dear love,
Who has my heart for ever,
Who is my happiness when we meet,
My sorrow when we sever.
She is all fire when I do burn,
Gentle when I moody turn,
Brave when I am sad and heavy
And all laughter when I am merry.
And so I lay and dreamed and dreamed,
And so the day wheeled on,
While all the birds with thoughts like mine
Were singing to the sun.

Love the Conqueror Came to Me

I

Love the Conqueror came to me, —
He whom I did long deride, —
Gave humility for pride,
April voicing
My rejoicing
I — who fancied I was free —
Glad to be with garlands tied!

II

Love the Awakener came to me;
Called my sleeping soul to strife,
Offered gift of fuller life
(Wish, the measure
Of my pleasure);
And the bud that knew no bee
Burst, a rose with beauty rife.

III

Love the Tester came to me;
For the paean gave the dirge,

To a Lady whose Husband was jealous of her cares of his Visits

When too much zeale doth fire devotion,
Love is not love, but superstition:
Even so in civill duties, when we come
Too oft, we are not kind but troublesome.
Yet, as the first is not Idolatry,
So is the last but grieved industry;
And such was mine, whose strife to honour you
By overplus hath robd you of your due.

At a Concert

Music inspires me but to think of thee,
For thou art of the music of the world —
A strain of that imperishable voice
That speaks in beauty, harmony, and love.
When Mozart wakes the gladness of my youth
I see perpetual childhood in thy face.
When Chopin, hand in hand with Love, leads on
Through meadowy pleasures to the verge of pain,
How near, how tender is thy beating heart!
And oh, when from the skies Beethoven sounds
His sure, triumphant song, how it vibrates
Deep memories of thy reposeful soul!

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