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Penguin's Poems for Love

Page 8

by Laura Barber


  O! let me have thee whole, – all, all, be mine!

  That shape, that fairness, that sweet minor zest

  Of love, your kiss – those hands, those eyes divine,

  That warm, white, lucent, million-pleasured breast –

  Yourself – your soul – in pity give me all,

  Withhold no atom’s atom or I die;

  Or living on perhaps, your wretched thrall,

  Forget, in the mist of idle misery,

  Life’s purposes – the palate of my mind

  Losing its gust, and my ambition blind!

  ANONYMOUS

  Against Platonic Love

  ’Tis true, fair Celia, that by thee I live;

  That every kiss, and every fond embrace

  Forms a new soul within me, and doth give

  A balsam to the wound made by thy face.

  Yet still methinks I miss

  That bliss

  Which lovers dare not name,

  And only then described is

  When flame doth meet with flame.

  Those favours which do bless me every day

  Are yet but empty and platonical.

  Think not to please your servants with half pay.

  Good gamesters never stick to throw at all.

  Who can endure to miss

  That bliss

  Which lovers dare not name,

  And only then described is

  When flame doth meet with flame?

  If all those sweets within you must remain,

  Unknown and ne’er enjoyed, like hidden treasure,

  Nature, as well as I, will lose her name,

  And you as well as I lose youthful pleasure.

  We wrong ourselves to miss

  That bliss

  Which lovers dare not name,

  And only then described is

  When flame doth meet with flame.

  Our souls which long have peeped at one another

  Out of the narrow casements of our eyes

  Shall now by love conducted meet together

  In secret caverns, where all pleasure lies.

  There, there we shall not miss

  That bliss

  Which lovers dare not name,

  And only then described is

  When flame doth meet with flame.

  ROBIN ROBERTSON

  Trysts

  meet me

  where the sun goes down

  meet me

  in the cave, under the battleground

  meet me

  on the broken branch

  meet me

  in the shade, below the avalanche

  meet me

  under the witch’s spell

  meet me

  tonight, in the wishing well

  meet me

  on the famine lawn

  meet me

  in the eye of the firestorm

  meet me

  in your best shoes

  and your favourite dress

  meet me

  on your own, in the wilderness

  meet me

  as my lover, as my only friend

  meet me

  on the river bed

  THOMAS CAREW

  from A Rapture

  I will enjoy thee now, my Celia, come,

  And fly with me to Love’s Elysium.

  The giant, Honour, that keeps cowards out,

  Is but a masquer, and the servile rout

  Of baser subjects only bend in vain

  To the vast idol; whilst the nobler train

  Of valiant lovers daily sail between

  The huge Colossus’ legs, and pass unseen

  Unto the blissful shore. Be bold and wise,

  And we shall enter: the grim Swiss denies

  Only to tame fools a passage, that not know

  He is but form and only frights in show

  The duller eyes that look from far; draw near

  And thou shalt scorn what we were wont to fear.

  We shall see how the stalking pageant goes

  With borrow’d legs, a heavy load to those

  That made and bear him; not, as we once thought,

  The seed of gods, but a weak model wrought

  By greedy men, that seek to enclose the common,

  And within private arms empale free woman.

  Come, then, and mounted on the wings of Love

  We’ll cut the flitting air and soar above

  The monster’s head, and in the noblest seats

  Of those blest shades quench and renew our heats.

  There shall the queens of love and innocence,

  Beauty and Nature, banish all offence

  From our close ivy-twines; there I’ll behold

  Thy bared snow and thy unbraided gold;

  There my enfranchised hand on every side

  Shall o’er thy naked polish’d ivory slide.

  No curtain there, though of transparent lawn,

  Shall be before thy virgin-treasure drawn;

  But the rich mine, to the enquiring eye

  Exposed, shall ready still for mintage lie,

  And we will coin young Cupids. There a bed

  Of roses and fresh myrtles shall be spread,

  Under the cooler shade of cypress groves;

  Our pillows of the down of Venus’ doves,

  Whereon our panting limbs we’ll gently lay,

  In the faint respites of our active play:

  That so our slumbers may in dreams have leisure

  To tell the nimble fancy our past pleasure,

  And so our souls, that cannot be embraced,

  Shall the embraces of our bodies taste.

  Meanwhile the bubbling stream shall court the shore,

  Th’ enamour’d chirping wood-choir shall adore

  In varied tunes the deity of love;

  The gentle blasts of western winds shall move

  The trembling leaves, and through their close boughs breathe

  Still music, whilst we rest ourselves beneath

  Their dancing shade; till a soft murmur, sent

  From souls entranced in amorous languishment,

  Rouse us, and shoot into our veins fresh fire,

  Till we in their sweet ecstasy expire.

  Then, as the empty bee that lately bore

  Into the common treasure all her store,

  Flies ’bout the painted field with nimble wing,

  Deflow’ring the fresh virgins of the spring,

  So will I rifle all the sweets that dwell

  In my delicious paradise, and swell

  My bag with honey, drawn forth by the power

  Of fervent kisses from each spicy flower.

  I’ll seize the rose-buds in their perfumed bed,

  The violet knots, like curious mazes spread

  O’er all the garden, taste the ripen’d cherry,

  The warm firm apple, tipp’d with coral berry:

  Then will I visit with a wand’ring kiss

  The vale of lilies and the bower of bliss;

  And where the beauteous region doth divide

  Into two milky ways, my lips shall slide

  Down those smooth alleys, wearing as they go

  A tract for lovers on the printed snow;

  Thence climbing o’er the swelling Apennine,

  Retire into thy grove of eglantine,

  Where I will all those ravish’d sweets distil

  Through Love’s alembic, and with chemic skill

  From the mix’d mass one sovereign balm derive,

  Then bring that great elixir to thy hive.

  Now in more subtle wreaths I will entwine

  My sinewy thighs, my legs and arms with thine;

  Thou like a sea of milk shalt lie display’d,

  Whilst I the smooth calm ocean invade

  With such a tempest, as when Jove of old

  Fell down on Danaë in a storm of gold;

  Yet my tall pine shall in the Cyprian strait

  Rid
e safe at anchor and unlade her freight:

  My rudder with thy bold hand, like a tried

  And skilful pilot, thou shalt steer, and guide

  My bark into love’s channel, where it shall

  Dance, as the bounding waves do rise or fall.

  Then shall thy circling arms embrace and clip

  My willing body, and thy balmy lip

  Bathe me in juice of kisses, whose perfume

  Like a religious incense shall consume,

  And send up holy vapours to those powers

  That bless our loves and crown our sportful hours,

  That with such halcyon calmness fix our souls

  In steadfast peace, as no affright controls.

  There, no rude sounds shake us with sudden starts;

  No jealous ears, when we unrip our hearts,

  Suck our discourse in; no observing spies

  This blush, that glance traduce; no envious eyes

  Watch our close meetings; nor are we betray’d

  To rivals by the bribed chambermaid.

  No wedlock bonds unwreathe our twisted loves,

  We seek no midnight arbour, no dark groves

  To hide our kisses: there, the hated name

  Of husband, wife, lust, modest, chaste or shame,

  Are vain and empty words, whose very sound

  Was never heard in the Elysian ground.

  All things are lawful there, that may delight

  Nature or unrestrained appetite;

  Like and enjoy, to will and act is one:

  We only sin when Love’s rites are not done.

  BARNABE BARNES

  Would I Were Changed

  Jove, for Europa’s love, took shape of bull,

  And, for Callisto, played Diana’s part,

  And, in a golden shower, he filled full

  The lap of Danaë with celestial art.

  Would I were changed but to my mistress’ gloves,

  That those white lovely fingers I might hide,

  That I might kiss those hands, which mine heart loves,

  Or else, that chain of pearl, her neck’s vain pride,

  Made proud with her neck’s veins, that I might fold

  About that lovely neck, and her paps tickle,

  Or her to compass, like a belt of gold,

  Or that sweet wine, which down her throat doth trickle,

  To kiss her lips, and lie next to her heart,

  Run through her veins, and pass by pleasure’s part.

  ROBERT HERRICK

  Upon Julia’s Clothes

  When as in silks my Julia goes,

  Then, then (me thinks) how sweetly flows

  That liquefaction of her clothes.

  Next, when I cast mine eyes and see

  That brave Vibration each way free;

  O how that glittering taketh me!

  ANNE STEVENSON

  Sous-entendu

  Don’t think

  that I don’t know

  that as you talk to me

  the hand of your mind

  is inconspicuously

  taking off my stocking,

  moving in resourceful blindness

  up along my thigh.

  Don’t think

  that I don’t know

  that you know

  everything I say

  is a garment.

  JOHN DONNE

  Elegy: To His Mistress Going to Bed

  Come, madam, come; all rest my powers defy;

  Until I labour, I in labour lie.

  The foe oft-times having the foe in sight

  Is tired with standing, though they never fight.

  Off with that girdle, like heaven’s zone glistering,

  But a far fairer world encompassing.

  Unpin that spangled breast-plate, which you wear

  That th’ eyes of busy fools may be stopped there.

  Unlace yourself: for that harmonious chime

  Tells me from you that now ’tis your bed-time.

  Off with that happy busk whom I envy

  That still can be, and still can stand so nigh.

  Your gown’s going off such beauteous state reveals

  As when from flow’ry meads th’ hill’s shadow steals.

  Off with your wiry coronet, and show

  The hairy diadem which on you doth grow.

  Now off with those shoes, and then safely tread

  In this love’s hallowed temple, this soft bed.

  In such white robes heaven’s angels used to be

  Received by men: thou, angel, bring’st with thee

  A heaven like Mohammed’s paradise; and though

  Ill spirits walk in white, we easily know

  By this these angels from an evil sprite:

  They set our hairs, but these the flesh upright.

  Licence my roving hands, and let them go

  Behind, before, above, between, below.

  Oh my America, my new-found land,

  My kingdom, safeliest when with one man manned,

  My mine of precious stones, my empery;

  How blest am I in this discovering thee!

  To enter in these bonds is to be free;

  Then where my hand is set, my seal shall be,

  Full nakedness, all joys are due to thee;

  As souls unbodied, bodies unclothed must be,

  To taste whole joys. Gems which you women use

  Are as Atlanta’s balls cast in men’s views,

  That when a fool’s eye lighteth on a gem

  His earthly soul may covet theirs, not them.

  Like pictures, or like books’ gay coverings, made

  For laymen, are all women thus arrayed,

  Themselves are mystic books, which only we

  Whom their imputed grace will dignify

  Must see revealed. Then since I may know,

  As liberally as to a midwife show

  Thyself. Cast all, yea, this white linen hence;

  There is no penance, much less innocence.

  To teach thee I am naked first: why then,

  What needst thou have more covering than a man?

  EDWARD THOMAS

  Will you come?

  Will you come?

  Will you come?

  Will you ride

  So late

  At my side?

  O, will you come?

  Will you come?

  Will you come

  If the night

  Has a moon,

  Full and bright?

  O, will you come?

  Would you come?

  Would you come?

  If the noon

  Gave light,

  Not the moon?

  Beautiful, would you come?

  Would you have come?

  Would you have come

  Without scorning,

  Had it been

  Still morning?

  Beloved, would you have come?

  If you come

  Haste and come.

  Owls have cried;

  It grows dark

  To ride.

  Beloved, beautiful, come.

  Passionately

  ROBERT JONES

  And is it night? are they thine eyes that shine?

  Are we alone, and here? and here, alone?

  May I come near, may I but touch thy shrine?

  Is jealousy asleep, and is he gone?

  O Gods, no more! silence my lips with thine!

  Lips, kisses, joys, hap, – blessings most divine!

  Oh, come, my dear! our griefs are turned to night,

  And night to joys; night blinds pale envy’s eyes;

  Silence and sleep prepare us our delight;

  Oh, cease we then our woes, our griefs, our cries:

  Oh, vanish words! words do but passions move;

  O dearest life! joy’s sweet! O sweetest love!

  ROBERT BROWNING

  Now

  Out of your whole life give but a moment!

&n
bsp; All of your life that has gone before,

  All to come after it, – so you ignore,

  So you make perfect the present, – condense,

  In a rapture of rage, for perfection’s endowment,

  Thought and feeling and soul and sense –

  Merged in a moment which gives me at last

  You around me for once, you beneath me, above me –

  Me – sure that despite of time future, time past, –

  This tick of our life-time’s one moment you love me!

  How long such suspension may linger? Ah, Sweet –

  The moment eternal – just that and no more –

  When ecstasy’s utmost we clutch at the core

  While cheeks burn, arms open, eyes shut and lips meet!

  JACKIE KAY

  High Land

  I don’t remember who kissed who first,

  who touched who first, who anything to whom.

  All I remember in the highland night –

  the sheep loose outside,

  the full moon smoking in the sky –

  was that you led me and I led you.

  And all of a sudden we were in a small room

  in a big house with the light coming in

  and your legs open; mine too.

  And it was this swirling, twirling thing.

  It’s hard to fasten it down;

  it is hard to remember what was what –

  who was who when the wind was coming in.

  GEORGE GORDON, LORD BYRON

  from Don Juan, Canto II

  CLXXXVI

  A long, long kiss, a kiss of youth, and love,

  And beauty, all concentrating like rays

  Into one focus, kindled from above;

  Such kisses as belong to early days,

  Where heart, and soul, and sense, in concert move,

  And the blood’s lava, and the pulse a blaze,

  Each kiss a heart-quake, – for a kiss’s strength,

  I think, it must be reckon’d by its length.

  CLXXXVII

  By length I mean duration; theirs endured

  Heaven knows how long – no doubt they never

  reckon’d;

  And if they had, they could not have secured

  The sum of their sensations to a second:

  They had not spoken; but they felt allured,

 

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