As Nora on the pavement Dances, and she entrances the grey hour Into the laughing circle of her power, The magic circle of her glances, As Nora dances on the midnight pavement; Petulant and bewildered, Thronging desires and longing looks recur, And memorably re-incarnate her, As I remember that old longing, A footlight fancy, petulant and bewildered; There where the ballet circles, See her, but ah! not free her from the race Of glittering lines that link and interlace; This colour now, now that, may be her, In the bright web of those harmonious circles. But what are these dance-measures, Leaping and joyous, keeping time alone With life's capricious rhythm, and all her own, Life's rhythm and hers, long sleeping, That wakes, and knows not why, in these dance-measures? It is the very Nora; Child, and most blithe, and wild as any elf, And innocently spendthrift of herself, And guileless and most unbeguiled, Herself at last, leaps free the very Nora. It is the soul of Nora, Living at last, and giving forth to the night, Bird-like, the burden of its own delight, All its desire, and all the joy of living, In that blithe madness of the soul of Nora | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MACGREGOR'S GATHERING by WALTER SCOTT ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 109 by PHILIP SIDNEY THE FOUNTAIN by MUHAMMAD AL-MU'TAMID II TREES BE COMPANY by WILLIAM BARNES THE ARCHERY MEETING by THOMAS HAYNES BAYLY FIVE LITTLE WANDERINGS: 2. CHILDHOOD by BERTON BRALEY KING VICTOR EMANUEL ENTERS FLORENCE, APRIL, 1860 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING |