Others may see thee; I behold thee not, Yet @3most@1 I think thee, beauteous blossom, mine: For I, who walk in shade, like Proserpine -- Things once too briefly looked on, long forgot -- Seem by some tender miracle divine, When breathing thee, apart, To hold the rapturous summer warm within my heart. We understand each other, thou and I! Thy velvet petals laid against my cheek, Thou feelest all the voiceless things I speak, And to my yearning makest mute reply: Yet a more special good of thee I seek, For God who made -- oh, kind! -- Beauty for one and all, gave @3fragrance@1 for the blind! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...D.G.C. TO J.A by EMILY JANE BRONTE ON THE SITE OF A MULBERRY-TREE PLANTED BY SHAKESPEARE ... by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI ROMEO AND JULIET by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH BIRD CONVERSATIONS, SELECTION by FARID OD-DIN MOHAMMAD EBN EBRAHIM ATTAR WATER SPORT by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN HINC LACHRIMAE; OR THE AUTHOR TO AURORA: 9 by WILLIAM BOSWORTH PRAISES OF WILTSHIRE by CHARLES WILLIAM BRODRIBB |