Ivy round her glimmering
ancle,
Vine about her glowing
brow,
Never sure was bride
so beauteous,
Daphne, chosen nymph,
as thou!
Thus he nears! and now
she feels him
Breathing hot on every
limb;
And he hears her own
quick pantings —
Ah! that they might
be for him.
O, that like the flower
he tramples,
Bending from his golden
tread,
Full of fair celestial
ardours,
She would bow her bridal
head.
O, that like the flower
she presses,
Nodding from her lily
touch,
Light as in the harmless
breezes,
She would know the god
for such!
See! the golden arms
are round her —
To the air she grasps
and clings!
See! his glowing arms
have wound her —
To the sky she shrieks
and springs!
See! the flushing chace
of Tempe
Trembles with Olympian
air —
See! green sprigs and
buds are shooting
From those white raised
arms of prayer!
In the earth her feet
are rooting! —
Breasts and limbs and
lifted eyes,
Hair and lips and stretching
fingers,
Fade away—and
fadeless rise.
And the god whose fervent
rapture
Clasps her finds his
close embrace
Full of palpitating
branches,
And new leaves that
bud apace,
Bound his wonder-stricken
forehead; —
While in ebbing measures
slow
Sounds of softly dying
pulses
Pause and quiver, pause
and go;
Go, and come again,
and flutter
On the verge of life,—then
flee!
All the white ambrosial
beauty
Is a lustrous Laurel
Tree!
Still with the great
panting love-chase
All its running sap
is warmed; —
But from head to foot
the virgin
Is transfigured and
transformed.
Changed!—yet
the green Dryad nature
Is instinct with human
ties,
And above its anguish’d
lover
Breathes pathetic sympathies;
Sympathies of love and
sorrow;
Joy in her divine escape;
Breathing through her
bursting foliage
Comfort to his bending
shape.
Vainly now the floating
Naiads
Seek to pierce the laurel
maze,
Nought but laurel meets
their glances,
Laurel glistens as they
gaze.
Nought but bright prophetic
laurel!
Laurel over eyes and
brows,
Over limbs and over
bosom,
Laurel leaves and laurel
boughs!
And in vain the listening
Dryad
Shells her hand against
her ear! —
All is silence—save
the echo
Travelling in the distance
drear.
London by lamplight
There stands a singer
in the street,
He has an audience motley
and meet;
Above him lowers the
London night,
And around the lamps
are flaring bright.