The Heptalogia by Algernon Charles Swinburne
page 40 of 48 (83%)
page 40 of 48 (83%)
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me, now--
But because a fellow's pathetic, you needn't low like a cow. I should like--on my soul, I should like--to remember--but somehow I can't-- If the lady whose love has reduced me to this was the niece or the aunt. But whichever it was, I feel sure, when I published my lays of last year (You remember their title--The Tramp--only seven-and-sixpence--not dear), I sent her a copy (perhaps her tears fell on the title-page--yes-- I should like to imagine she wept)--and the Bride of Bulgaria (MS.) I forwarded with it. The lyrics, no doubt, she found bitter--and sweet; But the Bride she rejected, you know, with expressions I will not repeat. Well--she did no more than all publishers did. Though my prospects were marred, I can pity and pardon them. Blindness, mere blindness! And yet it was hard. For a poet, Bill, is a blossom--a bird--a billow--a breeze-- A kind of creature that moves among men as a wind among trees. And a bard who is also the pet of patricians and dowagers doubly can Express his contempt for canaille in his fables where beasts are republican. Yet with all my disdainful forgiveness for men so deficient in _ton_ I cannot but feel it was cruel--I cannot but think it was wrong. I with the heat of my heart still burning against all bars As the fire of the dawn, so to speak, in the blanched blank brows of the stars-- I with my tremulous lips made pale by musical breath-- I with the shade in my eyes that was left by the kisses of Death-- (For Death came near me in youth, and touched my face with his face, And put in my lips the songs that belong to a desolate place-- Desolate truly, my heart and my lips, till her kiss filled them up!) |
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