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  1. #1
    echo Maska e Dara
    Anėtarėsuar
    30-11-2005
    Vendndodhja
    New York
    Postime
    694

    Isle of Lesbos!

    Michael Field ishte pseudonimi i Katherine Bradley dhe mbeses se saj Edith Cooper. Se bashku kane shkruar poezi dhe proza ne te cilat tregojne terheqjen sexuale ndaj njera-tjetres dhe cdo varg i krijimit te tyre permbante nota te larta sexualiteti. Nga kritike dhe artiste te ndryshem jane cilesuar si "gjeni" dhe emeruar si "Dy grate e tija Greke teper te dashura" nga Robert Browning.

    'It was deep April'

    It was deep April, and the morn
    Shakespere was born;
    The world was on us, pressing sore;
    My love and I took hands and swore,
    Against the world, to be
    Poets and lovers evermore,
    To laugh and dream on Lethe's shore,
    To sing to Charon in his boat,
    Heartening the timid souls afloat;
    Of judgement never to take heed,
    But to those fast-locked souls to speed,
    Whoe never from Apollo fled,
    Who spent no hour among the dead;
    Continually
    With them to dwell,
    Indifferent to heaven and hell.



    'Constancy'

    I love her with the seasons, with the winds,
    As the stars worship, as anemones
    Shudder in secret for the sun, as bees
    Buzz round an open flower: in all kinds
    My love is perfect, and in each she finds
    Herself the goal: then why, intent to teaze
    And rob her delicate spirit of its ease,
    Hastes she to range me with inconstant minds?
    If she should die, if I were left at large
    On earth without her-I, on earth, the same
    Quick mortal with a thousand cries, her spell
    She fears would break. And I confront the charge
    As sorrowing, and as careless of my fame
    As Christ intact before the infidel.


    'My Darling'

    Atthis, my darling, thou did'st stray
    A few feet to the rushy bed,
    When a great fear and passion shook
    My heart lest haply thou wert dead;
    It grew so still about the brook,
    As if a soul were drawn away.

    My darling! Nay, our very breath
    Nor light nor darkness shall divide;
    Queen Dawn shall find us on one bed,
    Nor must thou flutter from my side
    An instant, lest I feel the dread,
    At this, the immanence of death.


    'Unbosoming'

    The love that breeds
    In my heart for thee!
    As the iris is full, brimful of seeds,
    And all that it flowered for among the reeds
    Is packed in a thousand vermilion-beads
    That push, and riot, and squeeze, and clip,
    Till they burst the sides of the silver scrip,
    And at last we see
    What the bloom, with its tremulous, bowery fold
    Of zephyr-petal at heart did hold:
    So my breast is rent
    With the burthen and strain of its great content;
    For the summer of fragrance and sighs is dead,
    The harvest-secret is burning red,
    And I would give thee, after my kind,
    The final issues of heart and mind.


    'Maids, not to you my mind doth change'

    Maids, not to you my mind doth change;
    Men I defy, allure, estrange,
    Prostrate, make bond or free:
    Soft as the stream beneath the plane
    To you I sing my love's refrain;
    Between us is no thought of pain,
    Peril, satiety.

    Soon doth a lover's patience tire,
    But ye to manifold desire
    Can yield response, ye know
    When for long, museful days I pine,
    The presage at my heart divine;
    To you I never breathe a sign
    Of inward want or woe.

    When injuries my spirit bruise,
    Allaying virtue ye infuse
    With unobtrusive skill:
    And if care frets ye come to me
    As fresh as nymph from stream or tree,
    And with your soft vitality
    My weary bosom fill.


    'Come Gorgo, put the rug in place'

    Come Gorgo, put the rug in place,
    And passionate recline;
    I love to see thee in thy grace,
    Dark, virulent, divine.
    But wherefore thus thy proud eyes fix
    Upon a jewelled band?
    Art thou so glad the sardonyx
    Becomes thy shapely hand?

    Bethink thee! `Tis for such as thou
    Zeus leaves his lofty seat;
    `Tis at thy beauty's bidding how
    Man's mortal life shall fleet;
    Those fairest hands - dost thou forget
    Their power to thrill and cling?
    O foolish woman, dost thou set
    Thy pride upon a ring?


    'Ah, Eros doth not always smite'

    Ah, Eros doth not always smite
    With cruel, shining dart,
    Whose bitter point with sudden might
    Rends the unhappy heart --
    Not thus forever purple-stained,
    And sore with steely touch,
    Else were its living fountain drained
    Too oft and overmuch.
    O'er it sometimes the boy will deign
    Sweep the shaft's feathered end;
    And friendship rises without pain
    Where the white plumes descend.



    'Sometimes I do despatch my heart'

    Sometimes I do despatch my heart
    Among the graves to dwell apart:
    On some the tablets are erased,
    Some earthquake-tumbled, some defaced,
    And some that have forgotten lain
    A fall of tears makes green again;
    And my brave heart can overtread
    Her brood of hopes, her infant dead,
    And pass with quickened footsteps by
    The headstone of hoar memory,
    'Till she hath found
    One swelling mound
    With just her name writ and beloved,
    From that she cannot be removed.



    'So jealous of your beauty'


    So jealous of your beauty,
    You will not wed
    For dread
    That hymeneal duty
    Should touch and mar
    The lovely thing you are?
    Come to your garden-bed!

    Learn there another lesson:
    This poppy-head,
    Instead
    Of having crimson dress on,
    Is now a fruit,
    Whose marvellous pale suit
    Transcends the glossy red.

    What, count the colour
    Of apricot,
    Ungot,
    Warming in August, duller
    Than those most shy,
    Frail flowers that spread and die
    Before the sun is hot!

    Lady, the hues unsightly,
    And best forgot,
    Are not
    Berries and seeds set brightly,
    But withered blooms:
    Alack, vainglory dooms
    You to their ragged lot!



    'Already to mine eyelids' shore'


    Already to mine eyelids' shore
    The gathering waters swell,
    For thinking of the grief in store
    When thou wilt say 'Farewell.'
    I dare not let thee leave me, sweet,
    Lest it should be for ever;
    Tears dew my kisses ere we meet,
    Foreboding we must sever:
    Since we can neither meet nor part,
    Methinks the moral is, sweetheart,
    That we must dwell together.



    'A Girl'

    A Girl,
    Her soul a deep-wave pearl
    Dim, lucent of all lovely mysteries;
    A face flowered for heart's ease,
    A brow's grace soft as seas
    Seen through faint forest-trees:
    A mouth, the lips apart,
    Like aspen-leaflets trembling in the breeze
    From her tempestuous heart.
    Such: and our souls so knit,
    I leave a page half-writ --
    The work begun
    Will be to heaven's conception done,
    If she come to it.


    'I sing thee with the stock-dove's throat'

    I sing thee with the stock-dove's throat,
    Warm, crooning, superstitious note,
    That on its dearie so doth dote
    It falls to sorrow,
    And from the fair, white swans afloat
    A dirge must borrow.

    In thee I have such deep content,
    I can but murrnur a lament;
    It is as though my heart were rent
    By thy perfection,
    And all my passion's torrent spent
    In recollection.


    'Nightfall'

    She sits beside: through four low panes of glass
    The sun, a misty meadow, and the stream;
    Falling through rounded elms the last sunbeam
    Through night's thick fibre sudden barges pass
    With great forelights of gold, with trailing mass
    Of timber: rearward of their transient glearn
    The shadows settle, and profounder dream
    Enters, fulfils the shadows. Vale and grass
    Are now no more; a last leaf strays about,
    Then every wandering ceases; we remain.
    Clear dusk, the face of wind is on the sky:
    The eyes I love lift to the upper pane --
    Their voice gives note of welcome quietly
    'I love the air in which the stars come out.'



    'Sweet-Briar in Rose'


    So sweet, all sweet -- the body as the shyer
    Sweet senses, and the Spirit sweet as those:
    For me the fragrance of a whole sweet-briar
    Beside the rose!



    'Lo, my loved is dying '


    Lo, my loved is dying, and the call
    Is come that I must die,
    All the leaves are dying, all
    Dying, drifting by.
    Every leaf is lonely in its fall,
    Every flower has its speck and stain;
    The birds from hedge and tree
    Lisp mournfully,
    And the great reconciliation of this pain
    Lies in the full soft rain.
    My whores left me no time to get married.

  2. #2
    echo Maska e Dara
    Anėtarėsuar
    30-11-2005
    Vendndodhja
    New York
    Postime
    694
    Dhe e preferuara ime:

    "La Gioconda"

    Historic, Sidelong, implicating eyes;
    A smile of velve's lustre on the cheek;
    Calm lips the smile leads upward:hand that lies
    Glowing and soft, the patience in its rest
    Of cruelty that waits and does not seek
    For prey; a dusty forehead and breast
    Where twilight touches ripeness amourously:
    Behind her, crystal rocks, a sea and skies
    Of evanescent blue on cloud and creek;
    Landscape that shines suppressive of its zest
    For those vicissitudes by which men die.
    My whores left me no time to get married.

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