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

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with me, o’er tops of trees.

       To my fragrant palaces,

       Where they ever floating are

       Beneath the cherish of a star

       Call’d Vesper, who with silver veil

       Ever hides his brilliance pale,

       Ever gently-drows’d doth keep

       Twilight for the Fayes to sleep.

       Fear not that your watery hair

       Will thirst in drouthy ringlets there;

       Clouds of stored summer rains

       Thou shalt taste, before the stains

       Of the mountain soil they take,

       And too unlucent for thee make.

       I love thee, crystal Faery, true!

       Sooth I am as sick for you!

       SALAMANDER Out, ye aguish Faeries, out!

       Chilly lovers, what a rout

       Keep ye with your frozen breath.

       Colder than the mortal death.

       Adder-eyed Dusketha, speak,

       Shall we leave these, and go seek

       In the earth’s wide entrails old

       Couches warm as their’s are cold?

      O for a fiery gloom and thee,

       Dusketha, so enchantingly

       Freckle-wing’d and lizard-sided!

       DUSKETHA By thee, Sprite, will I be guided!

       I care not for cold or heat;

       Frost and flame, or sparks, or sleet,

       To my essence are the same; -

       But I honour more the flame.

       Sprite of Fire, I follow thee

       Wheresoever it may be,

       To the torrid spouts and fountains,

       Underneath earthquaked mountains;

       Or, at thy supreme desire,

       Touch the very pulse of fire

       With my bare unlidded eyes.

       SALAMANDER Sweet Dusketha! paradise!

       Off, ye icy Spirits, fly!

       Frosty creatures of the sky!

       DUSKETHA Breathe upon them, fiery sprite!

       ZEPHYR AND DUSKETHA Away! away to our delight!

       SALAMANDER Go, feed on icicles, while we

       Bedded in tongue-flames will be.

       DUSKETHA Lead me to those feverous glooms,

       Sprite of Fire!

       BREAMA Me to the blooms,

       Blue-eyed Zephyr, of those flowers

       Far in the west where the May-cloud lowers:

       And the beams of still Vesper, when winds are all wist,

       Are shed thro’ the rain and the milder mist,

       And twilight your floating bowers.

      Fragment of an Ode to Maia,

       Table of Contents

      Written on May Day, 1818

      Mother of Hermes! and still youthful Maia!

       May I sing to thee

       As thou wast hymned on the shores of Baiae?

       Or may I woo thee

       In earlier Sicilian? or thy smiles

       Seek as they once were sought, in Grecian isles,

       By bards who died content on pleasant sward,

       Leaving great verse unto a little clan?

       O, give me their old vigour, and unheard

       Save of the quiet primrose, and the span

       Of heaven and few ears,

       Rounded by thee, my song should die away

       Content as theirs,

       Rich in the simple worship of a day.

      Women, Wine, and Snuff

       Table of Contents

      Give me women, wine and snuff

       Until I cry out ‘hold, enough!’

       You may do so sans objection

       Till the day of resurrection;

       For bless my beard they aye shall be

       My beloved Trinity.

      On Oxford A Parody

       Table of Contents

      I

      The Gothic looks solemn,

       The plain Doric column

       Supports an old Bishop and Crosier;

       The mouldering arch,

       Shaded o’er by a larch

       Stands next door to Wilson the Hosier.

      II

      Vicè - that is, by turns, -

       O’er pale faces mourns

       The black tassell’d trencher and common hat

       The Chantry boy sings,

       The Steeple-bell rings,

       And as for the Chancellor - dominat.

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