Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE POET'S JOURNAL: THE VOICE OF THE TEMPTER, by BAYARD TAYLOR Poet's Biography First Line: Last night the tempter came to me, and said Last Line: And found her brow less dewy-wet than mine. Alternate Author Name(s): Taylor, James Bayard Subject(s): Death; Love; Temptation; Voices; Youth; Dead, The | ||||||||
LAST night the Tempter came to me, and said: "Why sorrow any longer for the dead? The wrong is done: thy tears and groans are naught: Forget the Past, -- thy pain but lives in thought. Night after night, I hear thy cries implore An answer: she will answer thee no more. Give up thine idle prayer that Death may come And thou mayest somewhere find her: Death is dumb To those that seek him. Live: for youth is thine. Let not thy rich blood, like neglected wine, Grow thin and stale, but rouse thyself, at last, And take a man's revenge upon the Past. What have thy virtues brought thee? let them go, And with them lose the burden of thy woe, Their only payment for thy service hard: They but exact, thou see'st, and not reward. Thy life is cheated, thou art cast aside In dust, the worn-out vessel of their pride. Come, take thy pleasure: others do the same, And love is theirs, and fortune, name, and fame! Let not the name of Vice thine ear affright: Vice is no darkness, but a different light, Which thou dost need, to see thy path aright; Or if some pang in this experience lie, Through counter-pain thy present pain will die. Bethink thee of the lost, the barren years, Of harsh privations, unavailing tears, The steady ache of strong desires restrained, And what thou hast deserved, and what obtained: Then go, thou fool! and, if thou canst, rejoice To make such base ingratitude thy choice, While each indulgence which thy breth ren taste But mocks thy palate, as it runs to waste!" So spake the Tempter, as he held outspread Alluring pictures round my prostrate head. 'Twixt sleep and waking, in my helpless ear His honeyed voice rang musical and clear; And half persuaded, shaken half with fear, I heard him, till the Morn began to shine, And found her brow less dewy-wet than mine. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...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 NOTE TO REALITY by TONY HOAGLAND BEDOUIN [LOVE] SONG by BAYARD TAYLOR NATIONAL ODE; INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, PHILADELPHIA by BAYARD TAYLOR |
|