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Imaginary Sonnets

By Eugene Lee-Hamilton

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33

LUCA SIGNORELLI TO HIS SON.

(1500.)

They brought thy body back to me quite dead,
Just as thou hadst been stricken in the brawl.
I let no tear, I let no curses fall,
But signed to them to lay thee on the bed;
Then, with clenched teeth, I stripped thy clothes soaked red;
And taking up my pencil at God's call,
All through the night I drew thy muscles all,
And writhed at every beauty of thy head;
For I required the glory of thy limbs
To lend it to archangel and to saint,
And of thy brow, for brows with halo rims;
And thou shalt stand, in groups which I will paint
Upon God's walls, till, like procession hymns
Lost in the distance, ages make them faint.