Poetry Explorer- Classic Contemporary Poetry, PASCAL, by LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY



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PASCAL, by                 Poet Analysis     Poet's Biography
First Line: Thou lovedst life, but not to brand it thine (o rich in all forborne felicities
Last Line: More blessedly, that men can name them not.
Subject(s): Death; Life; Pascal, Blaise (1623-1662); Dead, The


Thou lovedst life, but not to brand it thine (O rich in all forborne
felicities!),
Nor use it with marauding power, to seize
And stain the sweet earth's blue horizon-line.
Virgin the grape might in the trellis twine
Where thou hadst long ago an hour of ease,
And foot of thine across the unpressed leas
Went light as some Idaean foot divine.

Spirit so abstinent, in thy deeps lay
What passion of possession? Day by day
Was there no thirst upon thee, sharp and pure,
In forward sea-like surges unforgot?
Yes: and in life and death those joys endure
More blessedly, that men can name them not.





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