The Poetical Works of George Barlow In Ten [Eleven] Volumes |
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VII. |
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The Poetical Works of George Barlow | ||
187
SONNET III
ONE GODDESS
Ever, through darkness and unmeasured gloom,
When after soft arms' scent and warm embrace
I meet the eyeless mute deliberate face
That waits and threatens where no bounteous bloom
Of summer fills the fields no suns illume,
May I bear with me to the joyless place
Eternal dreams of one white goddess' grace
Whom I have served,—and will serve to the tomb.
When after soft arms' scent and warm embrace
I meet the eyeless mute deliberate face
That waits and threatens where no bounteous bloom
Of summer fills the fields no suns illume,
May I bear with me to the joyless place
Eternal dreams of one white goddess' grace
Whom I have served,—and will serve to the tomb.
For she the queen, when once her lips have smiled,
Forbids the soul she smiles on ever to flee:
She lures him as the flowers' smile lures a child
And sways him with most flowerlike sovereignty;
She who first sprang from wavelets undefiled,
Moulded of rose-bloom and the foam-white sea.
Forbids the soul she smiles on ever to flee:
She lures him as the flowers' smile lures a child
And sways him with most flowerlike sovereignty;
She who first sprang from wavelets undefiled,
Moulded of rose-bloom and the foam-white sea.
The Poetical Works of George Barlow | ||