A SILVER sea beneath the stars -- We paid to love his mystic rites, And from thy lips I kissed the scars Of fiercer joys and stranger nights. What redder lips, what mouth of fate, Till Buddha noddeth near the goal, Shall, stronger still, obliterate My one night's madness from thy soul? I brand thee through eternity, Upon thy blood I set my seal, And boy and girl and change and sea Cannot wipe out my mark or heal. While the great life-snake sheds its coat, I must rehearse my tragic part, To kiss the love-wounds from thy throat, And burn the iron in thy heart. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LAST MAN'S CLUB by JAMES GALVIN THE LITTLE BEACH BIRD by RICHARD HENRY DANA (1787-1879) IMAGINATION, FR. A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE TO HIS INGENIOUS FRIEND, MR. N. TATE by PHILIP AYRES ADON OLAM by GEORGE HENRY BORROW EXTRACTS FROM VERSES WRITTEN FOR THE NEW YEAR, 1823 by JOHN GARDINER CALKINS BRAINARD OBSERVATIONS IN THE ART OF ENGLISH POESY: 26. ELEGIAC VERSE: THE NINETH EPIGRAM by THOMAS CAMPION |