SAY not, O Swallow, in thy flight To that dear country of my birth (Where I shall come no day nor night) That I have married the Black Earth. But say that where sands glisten white, Thou didst behold a builded pyre, And witnessed how, with all due rite, I there was wedded unto Fire. For so went many a hero-sire Of mine, in time long out of mind, And had his full and free desire To tread along the trackless wind. A little band on some lone shore, They offered up a hecatomb; And while dark wine they did outpour Rose flame to its empyreal home. Oh, Fire, my bride, will challenge him -- Charos, the foe that Psyche loathes, Nor leaves within his chamber dim One shred wherewith my life now clothes! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FOR LOVE'S SAKE, KISS ME ONCE AGAIN! by BEN JONSON TWICE by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI INTAGLIOS by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH A DAY OF DAYS by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM THE DEATH OF YE LIFE OF LOVE by JOSEPH BEAUMONT |