Classic and Contemporary Poetry
NEW SPRING: 31, by HEINRICH HEINE Poet's Biography First Line: Linden blossoms drunk with moonlight Last Line: Might o'er stream and plain be gliding. Subject(s): Flowers; Spring | ||||||||
"LINDEN blossoms drunk with moonlight "Fly about in fragrant showers, "And the nightingale's sweet music "Fills the air and leafy bowers. "Ah! how sweet it is, my loved one, "'Neath these lindens to be sitting, "When the glimm'ring golden moonbeams "Through the fragrant leaves are flitting. "If thou lookest on the lime-leaf, "Thou a heart's form wilt discover; "Therefore are the lindens ever "Chosen seats of each fond lover. "Yet thou smilest, as though buried "In far distant visions yearning -- "Speak, beloved, all the wishes "That in thy dear heart are burning." Ah, my darling! I will tell thee Whence my thoughts proceed, and whither: Fain I'd see the chilly north-wind Sudden bring white snowstorms hither So that we, with furs well cover'd, And in gaudy sledges riding, Cracking whips, with bells loud ringing, Might o'er stream and plain be gliding. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPRING LEMONADE by TONY HOAGLAND A SPRING SONG by LYMAN WHITNEY ALLEN SPRING'S RETURN by GEORGE LAWRENCE ANDREWS ODE TO SPRING by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD ODE TO SPRING by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD SPRING FLOODS by MAURICE BARING SPRING IN WINTER by CHARLOTTE FISKE BATES SPRING ON THE PRAIRIE by HERBERT BATES THE FARMER'S BOY: SPRING by ROBERT BLOOMFIELD |
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