The Unknown Eros eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 92 pages of information about The Unknown Eros.

The Unknown Eros eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 92 pages of information about The Unknown Eros.
Of deathless scorpions at my slightest slip. 
Mother, last night he call’d me “Gipsy,” so
Roughly it smote me like a blow! 
Yet, oh,
I love him, as none surely e’er could love
Our People’s pompous but good-natured Jove. 
He used to send me stately overture;
But marriage-bonds, till now, I never could endure!’
   ’How should great Jove himself do else than miss
To win the woman he forgets to kiss;
Or, won, to keep his favour in her eyes,
If he’s too soft or sleepy to chastise! 
By Eros, her twain claims are ne’er forgot;
Her wedlock’s marr’d when either’s miss’d: 
Or when she’s kiss’d, but beaten not,
Or duly beaten, but not kiss’d. 
Ah, Child, the sweet
Content, when we’re both kiss’d and beat! 
—­But whence these wounds?  What Demon thee enjoins
To scourge thy shoulders white
And tender loins!’
   ’’Tis nothing, Mother.  Happiness at play,
And speech of tenderness no speech can say!’
   ’How learn’d thou art! 
Twelve honeymoons profane had taught thy docile heart
Less than thine Eros, in a summer night!’
   ’Nay, do not jeer, but help my puzzled plight: 
Because he loves so marvellously me,
And I with all he loves in love must be,
How to except myself I do not see. 
Yea, now that other vanities are vain,
I’m vain, since him it likes, of being withal
Weak, foolish, small!’
   ’How can a Maid forget her ornaments! 
The Powers, that hopeless doom the proud to die,
Unask’d smile pardon upon vanity,
Nay, praise it, when themselves are praised thereby.’ 
   ’Ill-match’d I am for a God’s blandishments! 
So great, so wise—­’
   ’Gods, in the abstract, are, no doubt, most wise;
But, in the concrete, Girl, they’re mysteries! 
He’s not with thee,
At all less wise nor more
Than human Lover is with her he deigns to adore. 
He finds a fair capacity,
And fills it with himself, and glad would die
For that sole She.’ 
   ’Know’st thou some potion me awake to keep,
Lest, to the grief of that ne’er-slumbering Bliss,
Disgraced I sleep,
Wearied in soul by his bewildering kiss?’
   ’The Immortals, Psyche, moulded men from sods
That Maids from them might learn the ways of Gods. 
Think, would a wakeful Youth his hard fate weep,
Lock’d to the tired breast of a Bride asleep?’
   ’Ah, me, I do not dream,
Yet all this does some heathen fable seem!’
   ’O’ermuch thou mind’st the throne he leaves above! 
Between unequals sweet is equal love.’ 
   ’Nay, Mother, in his breast, when darkness blinds,
I cannot for my life but talk and laugh
With the large impudence of little minds!’
   ’Respectful to the Gods and meek,
According to one’s lights, I grant
’Twere well to be;
But, on my word,
Child, any one, to hear you speak,
Would take you for a Protestant,
(Such fish I do foresee
When the charm’d fume comes strong on me,)
Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Unknown Eros from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.