The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters. John Keats

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters - John Keats страница 121

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters - John  Keats

Скачать книгу

style="font-size:15px;">       Faded the shape of beauty from my arms,

       Faded the voice, warmth, whiteness, paradise -

       Vanish’d unseasonably at shut of eve,

       When the dusk holiday - or holinight Of fragrant-curtain’d love begins to weave

       The woof of darkness thick, for hid delight ;

       But, as I’ve read love’s missal through today,

       He’ll let me sleep, seeing I fast and pray.

      O! Were I one of the Olympian twelve

       Table of Contents

      O! Were I one of the Olympian twelve,

       Their godships should pass this into a law, -

       That when a man doth set himself in toil

       After some beauty veiled far away,

       Each step he took should make his lady’s hand

       More soft, more white, and her fair cheek more fair;

       And for each briar-berry he might eat,

       A kiss should bud upon the tree of love,

       And pulp and ripen richer every hour,

       To melt away upon the traveller’s lips.

      Two or Three

       Table of Contents

      From a Letter to His Sister

      Two or three posies

       With two or three simples -

       Two or three noses

       With two or three pimples -

       Two or three wise men

       And two or three ninny’s -

       Two or three purses

       And two or three guineas -

       Two or three raps

       At two or three doors - Two or three naps

       Of two or three hours -

       Two or three cats

       And two or three mice

       Two or three sprats

       At a very great price -

       Two or three sandies

       And two or three tabbies -

       Two or three dandies

       And two Mrs — mum! Two or three smiles

       And two or three frowns -

       Two or three miles

       To two or three towns -

       Two or three pegs

       For two or three bonnets -

       Two or three dove eggs

       To hatch into sonnets.

      To the Ladies who Saw Me Crown’d

       Table of Contents

      What is there in the universal Earth

       More lovely than a Wreath from the bay tree?

       Haply a Halo round the Moon - a glee

       Circling from three sweet pair of lips in mirth;

       And haply you will say the dewy birth

       Of morning roses - riplings tenderly

       Spread by the Halcyon’s breast upon the sea -

       But these comparisons are nothing worth -

       Then is there nothing in the world so fair?

       The silvery tears of April? - Youth of May? Or June that breaths out life for butterflies?

       No - none of these can from my favourite bear

       Away the Palm - yet shall it ever pay

       Due reverence to your most sovereign eyes.

      A Draught of Sunshine

       Table of Contents

      Hence Burgundy, Claret, and Port,

       Away with old Hock and Madeira,

       Too earthly ye are for my sport;

       There’s a beverage brighter and clearer.

       Instead of a pitiful rummer,

       My wine overbrims a whole summer;

       My bowl is the sky,

       And I drink at my eye,

       Till I feel in the brain

       A Delphian pain - Then follow, my Caius! then follow:

       On the green of the hill

       We will drink our fill

       Of golden sunshine,

       Till our brains intertwine

       With the glory and grace of Apollo!

       God of the meridian,

       And of the east and west,

       To thee my soul is flown,

       And my body is earthward press’d. - It is an awful mission,

       A terrible division;

       And leaves a gulf austere

       To be fill’d with worldly fear.

       Aye, when the soul is fled

       To high above our head,

       Affrighted do we gaze

       After its airy maze,

       As doth a mother wild,

Скачать книгу