Listen, I who love thee well Have travelled far, and secrets tell; Cold the moon that gleams thine eyes, Yet beneath her further skies Rests, for thee, a paradise. I have plucked a flower in proof, Frail, in earthly light, forsooth: See, invisible it lies In this palm: now veil thine eyes: Quaff its fragrancies! Would indeed my throat had skill To breathe thee music, faint and still -- Music learned in dreaming deep In those lands, from Echo's lip. . . . 'Twould lull thy soul to sleep. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LOST ILLUSIONS by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON SOME VERSES UPON THE BURNING OF OUR HOUSE JULY 10, 1666 by ANNE BRADSTREET SOLDIER: TWENTIETH CENTURY by ISAAC ROSENBERG IDYLLS OF THE KING: GUINEVERE by ALFRED TENNYSON TO IRELAND IN THE COMING TIMES by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 17. THE DIFFICULT ADVENTURE by PHILIP AYRES |