I was the west wind over the garden, Out of the twilit marge and deep; You were the sultry languorous flower, Famished and filled and laid to sleep. I was the rover bee, and you -- With the hot red mouth where a soul might drown, And the buoyant soul where a man might swim -- You were the blossom that drew me down. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SEA POPPIES by HILDA DOOLITTLE PRISONED IN WINDSOR, HE RECOUNTETH HIS PLEASURE THERE PASSED by HENRY HOWARD THE BRIDGE by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW ELEGIAC SONNET: 2. WRITTEN AT THE CLOSE OF SPRING by CHARLOTTE SMITH THE GIRL'S LAMENTATION by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM HYMN TO FIRE by KONSTANTIN DMITRIYEVICH BALMONT VERSES WRITTEN IN THE LEAVES OF AN IVORY POCKET-BOOK by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |