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Lays of France

(Founded on The Lays of Marie.) By Arthur O'Shaughnessy. Second Edition

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88

Fair yellow murderess, whose gilded head
Gleaming with deaths; whose deadly body white,
Writ o'er with secret records of the dead;
Whose tranquil eyes, that hide the dead from sight
Down in their tenderest depth and bluest bloom;
Whose strange unnatural grace; whose prolonged youth—
Are for my death now and the shameful doom
Of all the man I might have been in truth—
Your fell smile, sweetened still, lest I might shun
Its lingering murder, with a kiss for lure,
Is like the fascinating steel that one
Most vengeful in his last revenge and sure
The victim lies beneath him, passes slow,
Again and oft again before his eyes
And over all his frame, that he may know
And suffer the whole death before he dies.
Will you not slay me? Stab me; yea, somehow
Deep in the heart: say some foul word to last
And let me hate you as I love you now:
Oh, would I might but see you turn and cast
That false fair beauty that you e'en shall lose,
And fall down there and writhe about my feet,
The crooked loathly viper I shall bruise
Through all eternity!—
Nay; kiss me, Sweet!