AH, Nora, my Nora, the light fades away, While Night like a spirit steals up o'er the hills; The thrush from his tree where he chanted all day, No longer his music in ecstasy trills. Then, Nora, be near me; thy presence doth cheer me, Thine eye hath a gleam that is truer than gold. I cannot but love thee; so do not reprove me, If the strength of my passion should make me too bold. Nora, pride of my heart -- Rosy cheeks, cherry lips, sparkling with glee, -- Wake from thy slumbers, wherever thou art; Wake from thy slumbers to me. Ah, Nora, my Nora, there 's love in the air, -- It stirs in the numbers that thrill in my brain; Oh, sweet, sweet is love with its mingling of care, Though joy travels only a step before pain. Be roused from thy slumbers and list to my numbers; My heart is poured out in this song unto thee. Oh, be thou not cruel, thou treasure, thou jewel; Turn thine ear to my pleading and hearken to me. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 24, ASKING FOR HER HEART (2) by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT VERSES ON THE DESTRUCTION OF DRUMLANRIG WOODS by ROBERT BURNS LINES FROM A DISCARDED POEM by GEORGE CRABBE THE FRIEND OF HUMANITY AND THE RHYMER by HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON WEALTH by NETTIE ARVILLA DOWNEY |