Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE LUTE PLAYER OF CASA BLANCA, by ADELE FLORENCE CORY NICOLSON Poet's Biography First Line: No others sing as you have sung Last Line: Lover, and lord of love! Alternate Author Name(s): Hope, Laurence Subject(s): Lutes | ||||||||
No others sing as you have sung Oh, Well Beloved of me! So glad you are, so lithe and young, As joyous as the sea, That dances in the golden rain The falling sunbeams fling, Ah, stoop and kiss me once again Then take your lute and sing. Oh, Lute-player, my Lute-player, Take up your lute and sing! The wind comes blowing, light and free: In all the summer isles No laughing thing it found to see As brilliant as your smiles. You are the very heart of Youth, The very Soul of Song, That lovely dream, made living truth, For which the poets long. Oh, Lute-player, my Lute-player, The very Soul of Song! Ah, dear and dark-eyed Lute-player, This joy is almost pain, To reach, when evening cools the air, Your level roof again. To see the palms, erect and slim, Against a golden sky, And hear, as twilight closes dim, The Mouddin's mournful cry, Across your songs, my Lute-player, The Faithful's evening cry. Each slender finger lightly slips, To its appointed strings, Ah, the sweet scarlet, parted lips Of One Beloved, who sings! Ah, the soft radiance of eyes By love and music lit! What need of Heaven beyond the skies Since here we enter it? You make my Heaven, my Lute-player, And hold the keys of it! And when the music waxes strong, I hear the sound of War, The drums are throbbing in the song, The clamor and the roar. The Desert's self is in the strain, The agony of slaves, The winds that sigh, as if in pain, About forgotten graves, Oh, Lute-player, my Lute-player, Those lonely Desert graves! The sightless sockets, whence the eyes, Were wrenched or burnt away, The mangled form that e'er it dies, Becomes the jackal's prey, The forced caress, the purchased smile, Ere youth be yet awake, Ah, break your melody awhile Or else my heart will break! I sometimes think, my Lute-player, You wish my heart to break! The sunset fires desert the West, The stars invade the sky, Lover of mine, 'tis time to rest And let the music die. Though Melody awake the morn, Yet Love should end the day. I kiss your hand the strings have worn And take your lute away. I kiss your hand, my Lute-player, And take the Lute away. At twilight on this roof of ours, So lonely and so high, We catch the scent of all the flowers Ascending to the sky. Sultan of Song, whose burning eyes Outblaze the stars above, Forget not, when the sunset dies You reign as Lord of Love! Ah, come to me, my Lute-player, Lover, and Lord of Love! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A BOOK OF AIRS: SONG 6. CORRINA by THOMAS CAMPION SONNET: TO HIS LUTE by WILLIAM DRUMMOND OF HAWTHORNDEN ON A LUTE FOUND IN A SARCOPHAGUS by EDMUND WILLIAM GOSSE THE LUTE OBEYS by THOMAS WYATT A SONG TO THE LUTE IN MUSICKE by RICHARD EDWARDS (1523-1566) THE POEMS OF COLD MOUNTAIN: 7 by HAN SHAN KASHMIRI SONG by ADELE FLORENCE CORY NICOLSON LINES FROM A PLUTOCRATIC POETASTER TO A DITCH-DIGGER by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS |
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