[PARVATI @3at her lattice@1] O LOVE! were you a basil-wreath to twine among my tresses, A jewelled clasp of shining gold to bind around my sleeve, O Love! were you the @3keora's@1 soul that haunts my silken raiment, A bright, vermilion tassel in the girdles that I weave; O Love! were you the scented fan that lies upon my pillow, A sandal lute, or silver lamp that burns before my shrine, Why should I fear the jealous dawn that spreads with cruel laughter, Sad veils of separation between your face and mine? @3Haste, O wild-bee hours to the gardens of the sunset! Fly, wild-parrot day to the orchards of the west! Come, O tender night, with your sweet, consoling darkness, And bring me my Beloved to the shelter of my breast!@1 [AMAR SINGH @3in the saddle@1] O Love! were you the hooded hawk upon my hand that flutters, Its collar-band of gleaming bells atinkle as I ride, O Love! were you a turban-spray or floating heron-feather, The radiant, swift, unconquered sword that swingeth at my side; O Love! were you a shield against the arrows of my foemen, An amulet of jade against the perils of the way, How should the drum-beats of the dawn divide me from your bosom, Or the union of the midnight be ended with the day? @3Haste, O wild-deer hours, to the meadows of the sunset! Fly, wild stallion day, to the pastures of the west! Come O tranquil night, with your soft, consenting darkness, And bear me to the fragrance of my Beloved's breast!@1 | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: EPILOGUE by EDGAR LEE MASTERS IN EARLIEST SPRING by WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS THE OLD CUMBERLAND BEGGAR by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH BEETHOVEN'S SEVENTH SYMPHONY by LYMAN WHITNEY ALLEN THE PILGRIM FATHERS by LEONARD BACON (1802-1881) |