A Song of a Pure-Hearted Girl

Lakka-trees ripen two by two
And mandarin-ducks die side by side.
If a true-hearted girl will love only her husband,
In a life as faithfully lived as theirs,
What troubling wave can arrive to vex
A spirit like water in a timeless well?

A Duet in Winter

Come, close your eyes and let us dream together
That June-time's glow is here;
See not the coming of the snow's first feather,
Hear not the wind's voice drear.

Oh, let's float back to where the roses tremble,
And breezes lift your hair;
And these pink asters,—do they not resemble
The climbing roses there?

You will not dream? How, then, can you remember
The month that bore our love,
Or taste its sweetness in this dark December,
All gloom the mistress of?

The asters faint are but the ghosts of roses

Unsatisfactory

‘Have other lovers,—say, my love,—
Loved thus before to-day?’—
‘They may have, yes! they may, my love;
Not long ago they may.’

But though they worshipped thee, my love,
Thy maiden heart was free?’—
‘Don't ask too much of me!’

‘Yet now 'tis you and I, my love,
Love's wings no more will fly?’—
‘If Love could never die, my love,
Our love should never die.’

‘For shame! and is this so, my love,
And Love and I must go?’—
‘Indeed I do not know, my love;
My life, I do not know.’

Cold Mountain

Encroaching on the emptiness, riot of color,
I love this uniquely, my own middle peak.
No cares at all, I lean on light staff,
I walk on calmly, following hidden tracks
On all the mountains falling of leaves is over.
And cold, azure mists form, layer upon layer.

A Song of Love and Your Dreams

If Life be the street
Where dreams are sold,
Faith is the purse
Of exhaustless gold.

Dreams are a-many,
Both false and true,
But Love's is the home
You fetch them to;

And there, all alone
With Love, you pour
The dreams you bought
On your chamber floor.

And when Love looks
Each packet through,
His smile turns all
The false ones true!

Euphrosyne

I must not say that thou wast true,
Yet let me say that thou wast fair;
And they, that lovely face who view,
Why should they ask if truth be there?

Truth—what is truth? Two bleeding hearts,
Wounded by men, by fortune tried,
Outwearied with their lonely parts,
Vow to beat henceforth side by side.

The world to them was stern and drear
Their lot was but to weep and moan.
Ah, let them keep their faith sincere,
For neither could subsist alone!

But souls whom some benignant breath

More Than This

I saw the beauty of the world
Before me like a flag unfurled,
The splendor of the morning sky,
And all the stars in company:
I thought, How beautiful it is!
My soul said, There is more than this.

I saw the pomps of death and birth,
The generations of the earth;
I looked on saints and heroes crowned,
And love as wide as heaven is round:
I thought, How wonderful it is!
My soul said, There is more than this.

Sometimes I have an awful thought
That bids me do the thing I ought;

Love Me

How long did the sun's round passionate mouth
Kiss that rose's lips, I wonder?
How long did the amorous wind from the south
Try to press her petals asunder?

How long did the honey-bee flit to and fro
Ere she threw her red vest apart,
And showed a glory of gold and snow
Hoarded beside her heart?

Longer far have I yearned for thy love,
And flown round thy folded blossom.
Will pity or passion never move
The proud disdain of thy bosom?

Love me! I loved thee long ago:
Love me! the land is sunny:

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