An Epic of Women, and Other Poems by Arthur William Edgar O'Shaughnessy - HTML preview

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PALM FLOWERS.

 

IN a land of the sun’s blessing,

Where the passion-flower grows,

My heart keeps all worth possessing;

And the way there no man knows.

 

—Unknown wonder of new beauty!

There my Love lives all for me;

To love me is her whole duty,

Just as I would have it be.

 

All the perfumes and perfections

Of that clime have met with grace

In her body, and complexions

Of its flowers are on her face.

 

All soft tints of flowers most vernal,

Tints that make each other fade:

In her eyes they are eternal,

Set in some mysterious shade.

 

Full of dreams are the abysses

Of the night beneath her hair;

But an open dawn of kisses

Is her mouth: O she is fair.

 

And she has so sweet a fashion

With her languid loving eyes,

That she stirs my soul with passion,

And renews my breath with sighs.

 

Now she twines her hair in tresses

With some long red lustrous vine;

Now she weaves strange glossy dresses

From the leafy fabrics fine:

 

And upon her neck there mingle

Corals and quaint serpent charms,

And bright beaded sea-shells jingle

Set in circlets round her arms.

 

There—in solitudes sweet smelling,

Where the mighty Banyan stands,

I and she have found a dwelling

Shadowed by its giant hands:

 

All around our banyan bowers

Shine the reddening palm-tree ranks,

And the wild rare forest flowers

Crowded on high purple banks.

 

Through the long enchanted weather

—Ere the swollen fruits yet fall,

While red love-birds sit together

In thick green, and voices call

 

From the hidden forest places,

And are answered with strange shout

By the folk whose myriad faces

All day long are peeping out

 

From shy loopholes all above us

In the leafy hollows green,

—While all creatures seem to love us,

And the lofty boughs are seen

 

Gilded and for ever haunted

By the far ethereal smiles—

Through the long bright time enchanted,

In those solitudes for miles,

 

I and She—at heart possessing

Rhapsodies of tender thought—

Wander, till our thoughts too pressing

Into new sweet words are wrought.

 

And at length, with full hearts sinking

Back to silence and the maze

Of immeasurable thinking,

In those inward forest ways,

 

We recline on mossy couches,

Vanquished by mysterious calms,

All beneath the soothing touches

Of the feather-leaved fan-palms.

 

Strangely, with a mighty hushing,

Falls the sudden hour of noon;

When the flowers droop with blushing,

And a deep miraculous swoon

 

Seems subduing the whole forest;

Or some distant joyous rite

Draws away each bright-hued chorist:

Then we yield with long delight

 

Each to each, our souls deep thirsting;

And no sound at all is nigh,

Save from time to time the bursting

Of some fire-fed fruit on high.

 

Then with sudden overshrouding

Of impenetrable wings,

Comes the darkness and the crowding

Mysteries of the unseen things.

 

O how happy are we lovers

In weak wanderings hand in hand!—

Whom the immense palm forest covers

In that strange enchanted land;

 

Whom its thousand sights stupendous

Hold in breathless charmed suspense;

Whom its hidden sounds tremendous

And its throbbing hues intense

 

And the mystery of each glaring

Flower o’erwhelm with wonder dim;—

We, who see all things preparing

Some Great Spirit’s world for him!

 

Under pomps and splendid glamour

Of the night skies limitless;

Through the weird and growing clamour

Of the swaying wilderness;

 

Through each shock of sound that shivers

The serene palms to their height,

By white rolling tongues of rivers

Launched with foam athwart the night;

 

Lost and safe amid such wonders,

We prolong our human bliss;

Drown the terrors of the thunders

In the rapture of our kiss.

 

By some moon-haunted savanna,

In thick scented mid-air bowers

Draped about with some liana,

O what passionate nights are ours!

 

O’er our heads the squadron dances

Of the fire-fly wheel and poise;

And dim phantoms charm our trances,

And link’d dreams prolong our joys—

 

Till around us creeps the early

Sweet discordance of the dawn,

And the moonlight pales, and pearly

Haloes settle round the morn;

 

And from remnants of the hoary

Mists, where now the sunshine glows,

Starts at length in crimson glory

Some bright flock of flamingoes.

———

 

O that land where the suns linger

And the passion-flowers grow

Is the land for me the Singer:

There I made me, years ago,

 

Many a golden habitation,

Full of things most fair to see;

And the fond imagination

Of my heart dwells there with me.

 

Now, farewell, all shameful sorrow!

Farewell, troublous world of men!

I shall meet you on some morrow,

But forget you quite till then.