That absolute love which many women feel

That absolute love which many women feel,
But men how few! Not winds which icily
Breathe freshness underneath a twilight sky,
When swift Apollo's burning chariot-wheel
Flies westward, bear to mortals such delight
As that most perfect love, unselfish, infinite.

More of the Garden than the Portico

More of the Garden than the Portico
Was his philosophy who dwelt therein.
He was not fain 'mid the mad world to win
Power or renown from the sparse overflow
Of Fortune's horn. To him three things were fair—
True Love, unfettered Song, and the wooing Summer-air.

A Saffron crescent in an opal sky

A SAFFRON crescent in an opal sky
He watched—while she into her wine-dark hair
Braided white violets—whiter than despair,
And half as sweet as love. There fluttered by
Wings of the merle, gay caroller, who sleeps
Upon a beechen bough in the far forest deeps.

I Have Loved Thee

It was the hour of dew and light;
In heaven a conflagration cold
Of roses burned, instead of clouds;
There was a rain of pearls and gold.

Then deep within a flowering grove
I saw thee, love, reclined at ease,
And thou wast languishing and pale,
And sighing like a summer breeze,

Plucking a blossom's leaves apart
With fingers fair as lilies are;
Thine eyes, the temples of love's fire,
Were fixed upon the heavens afar.

I marvelled that thy fingers soft,
Wherein the haughty rose was pressed,

Love Song for a Woman I Do Not Love

If I were a rich man, would you smile at me?
Can your bosom that swells your blouse so firmly be bought
And all the smooth warmth of your nakedness?
You are straight and beautiful,
Your hair is black and you have slender ankles.
I have seen the bloom and colour of your face on peaches;
I have felt the grace of your walk in Grecian statues;
And, as you go, you look back over your shoulder sideways;
Coquette! you were born in the age that bore me,
And almost I love you, my dark goddess!

But if I came to you and said to you, I am rich;

I love not her, however fair

I love not her, however, fair,
With vanity who fir'd,
Shows in her dress, her words, her air,
The wish to be admir'd.

But her I love, of modest mien,
Who no vain passion knows,
Who never wishes to be seen,
Or seen, with blushes glows.

Not her, who, with obtrusive air,
Courts all who're passing by;
But her, who beauty makes her care,
To please her lover's eye.

In vain she seeks the breast to move,
Who trusts to beauty's art;
Give me, if you would have me love,
A woman with a heart.

Hands

Not of your voice, now still, that used to sing,
I think,—now all your spirit's house lies dead—
Not of your little, lovely, eager head:
I think more of your hands than anything.…
Not of your face, sweet like a star, now lying
Immobile, nor those lips, no more replying
With unexpectedness,—those eyes, whence came
An eager dancing life could never tame.…
Oh, no, it is those little, lovely hands
That bring down all my hopes like sliding sands,
Those little, lovely hands, all arts in one,
In which the soul of motion lies undone.…

No Such Thing As Love

“There's no such thing as love.” So said
A flippant sneerer whom I met one day;—
And yet a child sat at her feet and played,
And a sweet babe upon her bosom lay.

Greatly I wondered. “No such thing as love?
Then what are these?” Her thin lip curled.
“These? These are incidents. Your words but prove
Your ignorance. You do not know the world.

“You wonder why I wed?” Still curled her lip;
Still flushed her dark eye with a bitter scorn:—
“Why, I am a woman—so obey the whip
That swings it lash above all women born.

To Ellen E. Miles

Friend of my later years, whose tender love
Has filled my home with blossoms, sweet though late,
Whose noble heart my spirit must approve,
As Duty's path thou tread'st with willing feet:
Thy welcome service, at Love's bidding mine,
As these my rhythmic waifs are gathered now,
Calls for a grateful tribute, and I twine
This simple wreath, dear N ELLIE , for thy brow.
Soul-sister! may the waiting years for thee
Pour out a largess of such holy joy
That earth shall seem the porch of heaven to be,

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