#English
His shoulder did I hold Too high that I, o’erbold Weak one, Should lean thereon. But He a little hath
Love, like a wind, shook wide your… You trembled, and your breath came… For that you loved me. You were so kind, so sweet, none c… To adore, but that you were so str…
Can you tell me where has hid her Pretty Maid July? I would swear one day ago She passed by, I would swear that I do know
Thou dost to rich attire a grace, To let it deck itself with thee, And teachest pomp strange cunning… To be thought simplicity. But lilies, stolen from grassy mol…
Not the Circean wine Most perilous is for pain: Grapes of the heavens’ star-loaden… Whereto the lofty-placed Thoughts of fair souls attain,
The breaths of kissing night and d… Were mingled in the eastern Heave… Throbbing with unheard melody, Shook Lyra all its star-cloud sev… When dusk shrank cold, and light t…
Lo I, Song’s most true lover, pla… That worse than other women she ca… For she being goddess, I have giv… Than mortal ladies from their love… And first of her embrace
As lovers, banished from their lad… And hopeless of her grace, Fashion a ghostly sweetness in its… Fondly adore Some stealth-won cast attire she w…
She was aweary of the hovering Of Love’s incessant tumultuous wi… Her lover’s tokens she would answe… ’Twere well she should be strange… A pretty babe, this Love,—but fie…
When the last stir of bubbling mel… Broke as my chants sank underneath… Of dulcitude, but sank again to ri… Where man’s embaying mind those wa… (For music hath its Oceanides
Lo, my book thinks to look Time’s… Under the banner of your spread re… Or if these levies of impuissant r… Fall to the overthrow of assaultin… Yet this one page shall fend obliv…
Alas, and I have sung Much song of matters vain, And a heaven-sweetened tongue Turned to unprofiting strain Of vacant things, which though
Wherein he excuseth himself for th… Alas! now wilt thou chide, and say… My figured descant hides the simpl… Or in another wise reproving, say I ill observe thine own high retic…
I do not need the skies’ Pomp, when I would be wise; For pleasaunce nor to use Heaven’s champaign when I muse. One grass-blade in its veins
Secret was the garden; Set i’ the pathless awe Where no star its breath can draw. Life, that is its warden, Sits behind the fosse of death. M…