I HEAR her bringing, while I pass Behind the cedar on the grass, The music of her feet. How charmingly Diana's pace Suits Warwickshire! and how her face (Unmatched in heaven) is sweet! I watch her as she gives the day A reason for its pulse; and stay In hope to see the birth Of Love's miraculous unrest, To melt for me that snowbound breast Of living sky and earth. I shall not yet be blessed to hold In shaking palms those locks of gold That lamp her in the day, And, dimmed by starfall, in her bed Prevent a darkness, richly spread In perfect disarry. 'Tis only when in slumber gleam The false but brilliant lights of dream, When shadowy pulses stir, That I in flimsy godship take The lips to beggar kings and make The round world fall to her. Ah, never-equalled shadow, change To substance! Finely range, And give me (since I stood So long in faith to ghostly charms) This girl to falter in my arms And tingle in my blood. If dreams come true, this cedar'd lawn Shall be a kingdom in the dawn Of Love's bewildered mirth: The world shall have a heavenly gleam, While heaven itself shall droop, and seem A paler sort of earth! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON SEEING THE ELGIN MARBLES by JOHN KEATS CALVARY by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON THE FLOWER-GATHERERS by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN AUTUMN MOOD by SELETHA A. BROWN THE COMPLAINT OF NATURE by MICHAEL BRUCE THE ARTIST by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON SONG OF A TURF-SOD by WILLIAM A. BYRNE DREAMS AND REALITIES by PHOEBE CARY THE LEGEND OF GOOD WOMEN: 3. THE LEGEND OF DIDO by GEOFFREY CHAUCER |