The Poetry of Oscar Wilde. Оскар Уайльд

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href="#u5035fa80-a4bd-5716-bb95-eab140b1067f">In the Forest

       The Ballad Of Reading Gaol

       Fantaisies Décoratives.

       Chorus of Cloud Maidens

       Untitled (See! the gold sun has risen)

       Untitled (She stole behind him where he lay)

       ΘPHNΩIΔIA

       Lotus Land

       Untitled (O loved one lying far away)

       A Fragment from the Agamemnon of Aeschylos

       Nocturne

       La Belle Gabrielle

       To V. F.

       To M. B. J.

      Ye Shall Be Gods

       Table of Contents

      Before the dividing of days

       Or the singing of summer or spring

       God from the dust did raise

       A splendid and goodly thing:

       Man – from the womb of the land,

       Man – from the sterile sod

       Torn by a terrible hand –

       Formed in the image of God.

       But the life of man is a sorrow

       And death a relief from pain,

       For love only lasts till tomorrow

       And life without love is vain.

      £TPO¦H

       And your strength will wither like grass

       Scorched by a pitiless sun,

       And the might of your hands will pass

       And the sands of your life will run.

       O gods not of saving but sorrow

       Whose joy is in weeping of men,

       Who shall lend thee their life, or who borrow

       From others to give thee again?

       O gods ever wrathful and tearless,

       O gods not of night but of day,

       Though your faces be frowning and fearless

       Thy kingdom shall pass – men say.

      ANTI£TPO¦H

       The spirit of man is arisen

       And crowned as a mighty King.

       The people have broken from prison

       And the voices once voiceless now sing.

       Cry aloud, O dethroned and defeated,

       Cry aloud for the fading of might,

       Too long were ye feared and entreated,

       Too long did men worship thy light.

       Aye, weep for your crimes without number,

       The loving and luring of men,

       For your greatness is sunken in slumber,

       Your light will n’er lighten again.

      £TPO¦H B

       But as many a lovely flower

       Is born of a sterile seed,

       In a fatal and fearful hour

       There grew from this creedless breed

       Love – fostered in flame and in fire

       That dies but to blossom again,

       Love – ever distilling desire

       Like wine with the eyelids of men.

       We kneel to the great Iapygian,

       We bow to the Lampsacene’s shrine,

       For hers is the only religion,

       And hers to entice and entwine –

      ANTI£TPO¦H B

       There once was another, men tell us,

       The giver and taker of life,

       A lovingless God and a jealous

       Whose joy was in weeping and strife.

       He is gone; and his temple ‘tis sunken

       In ashes and fallen in dust,

       For the souls of the people are drunken

       With dreams of the Lady of Lust –

       We kneel to the Cyprian Mother,

       We take up our lyres and sing,

       ‘Thou are crowned with the crown of another,

       Thou are throned where another was King.

      Ravenna

       Table of Contents

      This ballad won the Newdigate Prizein 1878.

      I.

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