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A Sheaf of Verses: Poems. Radclyffe HallЧитать онлайн книгу.

A Sheaf of Verses: Poems - Radclyffe Hall


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       Table of Contents

      The world that thro' its vale of tears

      Looks out upon Eternity

      Has yet one smile for us, and we

      Still youthful in the count of years,

      May add our smiles, and kiss the lips

      Of life, for whosoever sips

      The wine within that ruddy bowl

      Has quaffed defiance to the spheres.

      Beloved, see, I drink thereto!

      And pass the goblet on to you.

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      To-day the still, deep mind of the Earth

      Has steeped in longing her wistful eyes,

      A sense of wonder and glad surprise

      Thrills thro' her heart with a thought of birth.

      The grave All-Mother looks up and smiles,

      Her breath comes balmy from sunlit mouth,

      Her bosom bare to the ardent south

      Is fanned by perfume from fruitful miles.

      All winter long has the dear Earth slept

      In drifts of snow, 'neath the bane of frost,

      Her children sought for the Mother lost,

      Yet found her not, and in anguish wept.

      All winter long have my senses cried

      For warmth of sun, and the blue of sky,

      The hard north answered to mock my sigh,

      And all the glory of life denied.

      The cold mists drifting on land and sea,

      Like ghosts of passions burnt out and chill,

      Smote heart and soul with the fear of ill,

      That cast its awfulness over me.

      The dank gray sails, and the dank gray shore,

      They melted each in the other's face,

      With clammy kiss, in a wan embrace

      That left them colder than e'en before.

      And thro' the boughs of the moss-grown trees

      The sap flowed sluggish, or not at all,

      While here and there would a dead leaf fall,

      Like thought of harrowing memories.

      Then from the heart of the Universe

      There rose a wail of unending woe,

      An anguished prayer from the deeps below:

      "Oh! Mother, lift from our souls the curse!"

      "Oh! Mother, quicken thy sacred womb,

      With fire that throbs in the veins of Spring,

      Behold the numbness of everything,

      And only thou can avert the doom."

      "Oh! Mother, hear us!" But silent still

      The Earth slept on, as it were in death.

      Her ice-bound bosom stirred not with breath,

      So fast she lay 'neath the winter's will.

      I joined my prayer to the wind and trees,

      I joined my cry to the striving soil,

      I said, "Oh! Mother, our endless toil

      Has made us sicken with miseries.

      "Rise up! and help us again to live,

      Rise up! uncover thy fruitful breast,

      We faint in winter's unrestful rest,

      We burn with longings to love and give."

      And as I spoke came a voice more strong

      Than all creation's, o'er land and sea

      It called our Mother to ecstasy,

      And lo! she stirred, who had slept so long.

      She stirred, she opened her drowsy eyes,

      And bending down from the dome above,

      Beheld the form of embodied Love,

      As Spring stepped Earthward from Paradise.

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      I often think that all those vast desires

      For purer joys, that thrill the human heart,

      Vague yearnings such as solitude inspires,

      That nameless something silence can impart,

      Could after all be quenched by simple things,

      Whose spirits dwell within the wide-eyed flowers,

      Or haunt deep glades, where scent of primrose clings

      About the garments of the passing hours.

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      Moth to the flame!

      Fool that you be,

      Life's but a game,

      Love is the same,

      Better go free!

      Moth to the fire!

      Madness your fate;

      Burnt of desire,

      If you expire,

      Joy comes too late.

      Moth to the kiss

      Bringing you death!

      "Gladly for this

      Agonized bliss,

      With my last breath

      Will I adore

      As ne'er before!"

      Foolish Moth saith.

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      Dear, give me the tips of your fingers

      To hold in this scented gloom,

      'Mid the sighs of the dying roses,

      That steal through the breeze-swept room;

      I would have you but lightly touch me,

      A phantom might stir the dress,

      In its passing, of some lost lover

      With just such a faint caress;

      Or a butterfly wan with summer

      Brush


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