• You say you love; but with a voice
    Chaster than a nun's, who singeth
    The soft vespers to herself
    While the chime-bell ringeth—
    O love me truly!

    You say you love; but with a smile
    Cold as sunrise in September,
    As you were Saint Cupid's nun,
    And kept his weeks of Ember—
    O love me truly!

    You say you love; but then your lips
    ...

  • Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art—
    Not in lone splendour hung aloft the night,
    And watching, with eternal lids apart,
    Like nature's patient sleepless eremite,
    The moving waters at their priestlike task
    Of pure ablution round earth's human shores,
    Or gazing on the new soft-fallen mask
    Of snow upon the mountains and the moors;
    No—yet...

  • Love not me for comely grace,
    For my pleasing eye or face;
    Nor for any outward part,
    No, nor for my constant heart:
    For those may fail or turn to ill,
    So thou and I shall sever.
    Keep therefore a true woman's eye,
    And love me still, but know not why;
    So hast thou the same reason still
    To doat upon me ever.

  • I

    If I were her lover,
    I'd wade through the clover
    Over the fields before
    The gate that leads to her door;
    Over the meadows,
    To wait, 'mid the shadows,
    The shadows that circle her door,
    For the heart of my heart and more.
    And there in the clover
    Close by her,
    Over and over
    I'd sigh her:
    "Your eyes are as brown...

  • Come to me in my dreams, and then
    By day I shall be well again!
    For then the night will more than pay
    The hopeless longing of the day.

    Come, as thou cam'st a thousand times,
    A messenger from radiant climes,
    And smile on thy new world, and be
    As kind to others as to me!

    Or, as thou never cam'st in sooth,
    Come now, and let me dream it truth...

  • I pray thee, leave, love me no more,
    Call home the heart you gave me!
    I but in vain that saint adore
    That can but will not save me.
    These poor half-kisses kill me quite—
    Was ever man thus servèd?
    Amidst an ocean of delight
    For pleasure to be starvèd?

    Show me no more those snowy breasts
    With azure riverets branchèd,...

  • Whose is the love that, gleaming through the world,
    Wards off the poisonous arrow of its scorn?
    Whose is the warm and partial praise,
    Virtue's most sweet reward?

    Beneath whose looks did my reviving soul
    Riper in truth and virtuous daring grow?
    Whose eyes have I gazed fondly on,
    And loved mankind the more?

    Harriet! on thine:—thou wert my purer...

  • Music, when soft voices die,
    Vibrates in the memory.—
    Odours, when sweet violets sicken,
    Live within the sense they quicken.—

    Rose leaves, when the rose is dead,
    Are heap'd for the beloved's bed—
    And so thy thoughts, when thou art gone,
    Love itself shall slumber on.

  • The fountains mingle with the river
    And the rivers with the ocean,
    The winds of heaven mix for ever
    With a sweet emotion;
    Nothing in the world is single,
    All things by a law divine
    In one another's being mingle—
    Why not I with thine?

    See the mountains kiss high heaven,
    And the waves clasp one another;
    No sister-flower would be forgiven
    ...

  • I loved her for that she was beautiful;
    And that to me she seem'd to be all Nature,
    And all varieties of things in one:
    Would set at night in clouds of tears, and rise
    All light and laughter in the morning; fear
    No petty customs nor appearances;
    But think what others only dream'd about;
    And say what others did but think; and do
    What others dared...