IN dainty hoop, with flowers all-richly dight, With beauty-patches on her painted face, With pointed shoes all hung about with lace, With tow'ring curls, and, wasp-like, fasten'd tight, -- Thus was the spurious muse equipp'd that night When first she offer'd thee her fond embrace; But thou eludedst her and leftst the place, Led by a mystic impulse from her sight: A castle in the desert thou didst find, Where, like a lovely marble image shrin'd, Lay a fair maid, in magic slumber sunk; But soon the spell was loosed, -- when kiss'd by thee, With smiles the lawful muse of Germany Awoke, and sank within thine arms, love-drunk. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A WOMAN'S ANSWER by ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER ON RECEIVING [THE FIRST] NEWS OF THE WAR by ISAAC ROSENBERG THE BELLS OF YOUTH by WILLIAM SHARP SONGS OF TRAVEL: 1. THE VAGABOND by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON |