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Love Poems and Others. D. H. LawrenceЧитать онлайн книгу.

Love Poems and Others - D. H. Lawrence


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myself, and the place, and my blood,

       Which burned with rage, as I bade her come

      Home, away home, ere the lightning floated forth again.

       Table of Contents

      When the autumn roses

       Are heavy with dew,

      Before the mist discloses

       The leaf’s brown hue,

      You would, among the laughing hills

       Of yesterday

      Walk innocent in the daffodils,

      Coiffing up your auburn hair

      In a puritan fillet, a chaste white snare

      To catch and keep me with you there

       So far away.

      When from the autumn roses

       Trickles the dew,

      When the blue mist uncloses

       And the sun looks through,

      You from those startled hills

       Come away,

      Out of the withering daffodils;

      Thoughtful, and half afraid,

      Plaiting a heavy, auburn braid

      And coiling it round the wise brows of a maid

       Who was scared in her play.

      When in the autumn roses

       Creeps a bee,

      And a trembling flower encloses

       His ecstasy,

      You from your lonely walk

       Turn away,

      Wait among the beeches

      For your late bee who beseeches

      To creep through your loosened hair till he reaches,

       Your heart of dismay.

       Table of Contents

      Slowly the moon is rising out of the ruddy haze,

      Divesting herself of her golden shift, and so

      Emerging white and exquisite; and I in amaze

      See in the sky before me, a woman I did not know

      I loved, but there she goes and her beauty hurts my heart;

      I follow her down the night, begging her not to depart.

       Table of Contents

      High and smaller goes the moon, she is small and very far from me,

      Wistful and candid, watching me wistfully, and I see

      Trembling blue in her pallor a tear that surely I have seen before,

      A tear which I had hoped that even hell held not again in store.

       Table of Contents

      A tiny moon as white and small as a single jasmine flower

      Leans all alone above my window, on night’s wintry bower,

      Liquid as lime-tree blossom, soft as brilliant water or rain

      She shines, the one white love of my youth, which all sin cannot stain.

       Table of Contents

      The train in running across the weald has fallen into a steadier stroke

      So even, it beats like silence, and sky and earth in one unbroke

      Embrace of darkness lie around, and crushed between them all the loose

      And littered lettering of leaves and hills and houses closed, and we can use

      The open book of landscape no more, for the covers of darkness have shut upon

      Its written pages, and sky and earth and all between are closed in one.

      And we are smothered between the darkness, we close our eyes and say “Hush!” we try

      To escape in sleep the terror of this immense deep darkness, and we lie

      Wrapped up for sleep. And then, dear God, from out of the twofold darkness, red

      As if from the womb the moon arises, as if the twin-walled darkness had bled

      In one great spasm of birth and given us this new, red moon-rise

      Which lies on the knees of the darkness bloody, and makes us hide our eyes.

      The train beats frantic in haste, and struggles away

      From this ruddy terror of birth that has slid down

      From out of the loins of night to flame our way

      With fear; but God, I am glad, so glad that I drown

      Lies God all red before me, and I am glad,

      As the Magi were when they saw the rosy brow

      Of the Infant bless their constant folly which had

      Brought them thither to God: for now I know

      That the Womb is a great red passion whence rises all

      The shapeliness that decks us here-below:

      Yea like the fire that boils within this ball

      Of earth, and quickens all herself with flowers,

      God burns within the stiffened clay of us;

      And every flash of thought that we and ours

      Send up to heaven, and every movement, does

      Fly like a spark from this God-fire of passion;

      And pain of birth, and joy of the begetting,

      And sweat of labour, and the meanest fashion

      Of fretting or of gladness, but the jetting

      Of


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