Classic and Contemporary Poetry
ODE TO A LADY WHOSE LOVER WAS KILLED BY A BALL, by GEORGE GORDON BYRON Poet's Biography First Line: Lady! In whose heroic port Last Line: As many a baffled heart can tell. Alternate Author Name(s): Byron, Lord; Byron, 6th Baron Subject(s): Death | ||||||||
(WHICH AT THE SAME TIME SHIVERED A PORTRAIT NEXT HIS HEART) MOTTO LADY! in whose heroic port And Beauty, Victor even of Time, And haughty lineaments, appear Much that is awful, more that's dear -- Wherever human hearts resort There must have been for thee a Court, And Thou by acclamation Queen, Where never Sovereign yet had been. That eye so soft, and yet severe, Perchance might look on Love as Crime; And yet -- regarding thee more near -- The traces of an unshed tear Compress'd back to the heart, And mellow'd Sadness in thine air, Which shows that Love hath once been there, To those who watch thee will disclose More than ten thousand tomes of woes Wrung from the vain Romancer's art With thee how proudly Love hath dwelt! His full Divinity was felt, Maddening the heart he could not melt, Till Guilt became Sublime; But never yet did Beauty's Zone For him surround a lovelier throne, Than in that bosom once his own: And he the Sun and Thou the Clime Together must have made a Heaven For which the Future would be given. And thou hast loved -- Oh! not in vain! And not as common Mortals love. The Fruit of Fire is Ashes, The Ocean's tempest dashes Wrecks and the dead upon the rocky shore: True Passion must the all-searching changes prove, The Agony of Pleasure and of Pain, Till Nothing but the Bitterness remain; And the Heart's Spectre flitting through the brain Scoffs at the Exorcism which would remove. And where is He thou lovedst? in the tomb, Where should the happy Lover be! For him could Time unfold a brighter doom, Or offer aught like thee? He in the thickest battle died, Where Death is Pride; And Thou his widow -- not his bride, Were 't not more free -- Here where all love, till Love is made A bondage or a trade, Here -- thou so redolent of Beauty, In whom Caprice had seem'd a duty, Thou, who couldst trample and despise The holiest chain of human ties For him, the dear One in thine eyes, Broke it no more. Thy heart was wither'd to its Core, Its hopes, its fears, its feelings o'er: Thy Blood grew Ice when his was shed, And Thou the Vestal of the Dead. Thy Lover died, as All Who truly love should die; For such are worthy in the fight to fall Triumphantly. No Cuirass o'er that glowing heart The deadly bullet turn'd apart: Love had bestow'd a richer Mail, Like Thetis on her Son; But hers at last was vain, and thine could fail -- The hero's and the lover's race was run. Thy worshipp'd portrait, thy sweet face, Without that bosom kept its place As Thou within. Oh! enviously destined Ball! Shivering thine imaged charms and all Those Charms would win: Together pierced, the fatal Stroke hath gored Votary and Shrine, the adoring and the adored. That Heart's last throb was thine, that blood Baptized thine Image in its flood, And gushing from the fount of Faith O'erflow'd with Passion even in Death, Constant to thee as in its hour Of rapture in the secret bower. Thou too hast kept thy plight full well, As many a baffled Heart can tell. | Discover our poem explanations - click here!Other Poems of Interest...DOUBLE ELEGY by MICHAEL S. HARPER A FRIEND KILLED IN THE WAR by ANTHONY HECHT FOR JAMES MERRILL: AN ADIEU by ANTHONY HECHT TARANTULA: OR THE DANCE OF DEATH by ANTHONY HECHT CHAMPS D?ÇÖHONNEUR by ERNEST HEMINGWAY HOW THE MIRROR LOOKS THIS MORNING by HICOK. BOB NOTE TO REALITY by TONY HOAGLAND |
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