This tree outside my window here, Naked, umbrageous, fresh or sere, Has neither chance nor will to be Anything but a linden tree, Even if its branches grew to span The continent; for nature's plan Insists that infinite extension Shall create no new dimension. From the first snuggling of the seed In earth, a branchy form's decreed. Unwritten poems loom as if They'd cover the whole of earthly life. But each one, growing, learns to trim its Impulse and meaning to the limits Roughed out by me, then modified In its own truth's expanding light. A poem, setting to its form, Finds there's no jailer, but a norm Of conduct, and a fitting sphere Which stops it wandering everywhere. As for you, my love, it's harder, Though neither prisoner nor warder, Not to desire you both: for love Illudes us we can lightly move Into a new dimension, where The bounds of being disappear And we make one impassioned cell. So wanting to be all in all Each for each, a man and a woman Defy the limits of what's human. Your glancing eyes, your animal tongue, Your hands that flew to mine and clung Like birds on bough, with innocence Masking those young experiments Of flesh, persuaded me that nature Formed us each other's god and creature. Play out then, as it should be played, The sweet illusion that has made An eldorado of your hair And our love an everywhere. But when we cease to play explorers And become settlers, clear before us Lies the next need-to re-define The boundary between yours and mine; Else, one stays prisoner, one goes free. Each to his own identity Grown back, shall prove our love's expression Purer for this limitation. Love's essence, like a poem's, shall spring From the not saying everything. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OH! WEEP FOR THOSE by GEORGE GORDON BYRON THE MAGNETIC MOUNTAIN: 32 by CECIL DAY LEWIS BOOKER T. WASHINGTON by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR THE LAST ROSE OF SUMMER by THOMAS MOORE THE NAME OF JESUS by JOHN NEWTON RHAPSODY by MARTIN DONISTHORPE ARMSTRONG VERMONT FOR A LITTLE GIRL by DANIEL LEAVENS CADY |