Poems — Volume 1 by George Meredith
page 51 of 256 (19%)
page 51 of 256 (19%)
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Only still more sweet and lovely For those terrors on her brows, Those swift glances wild and brilliant, Those delicious panting vows. Timidly the timid shoulders Shrinking from the fervid hand! Dark the tide of hair back-flowing From the blue-veined temples bland! Lovely, too, divine Apollo In the speed of his pursuit; With his eye an azure lustre, And his voice a summer lute! Looking like some burnished eagle Hovering o'er a fluttered bird; Not unseen of silver Naiad, And of wistful Dryad heard! Many a morn the naked beauty Saw her bright reflection drown In the flowing smooth-faced river, While the god came sheening down. Down from Pindus bright Peneus Tells its muse-melodious source; Sacred is its fountained birthplace, And the Orient floods its course. |
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