Emblems Of Love eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 149 pages of information about Emblems Of Love.

Emblems Of Love eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 149 pages of information about Emblems Of Love.

Ozias
     I pray thee hear me out. 
The dream of loving thee and being loved
Hath been my life; yea, with it I have kept
My heart drugg’d in a long delicious night
Colour’d with candles of imagined sense,
And musical with dreamt desire.  I said,
The day will surely come upon the world,
To scatter this sweet night of fantasy
With morning, pour’d on my dream-feasted heart
Out of thine eyes, Judith.  And yet I still
Feared for my dream, even as a maiden fears
The body of her lover.  But, in the midst
Of all this charm’d delaying,—­behold Death
Leapt into our world, lording it, standing huge
In front of the future, looking at us! 
Thou seest now why, when the people came
Crying wildly to be given up to death,
I bade them wait five days?—­That I at last
Might stamp the image of my glorious dream
Upon the world, even though it be wax
And the fires are kindling that must melt it out. 
Judith, thou hast now five days more to live
This life of beautiful passion and sweet sense: 
And now my love comes to thee like an angel
To call thee out of thy visionary love
For lost Manasses, out of ghostly desire
And shadows of dreams housing thy soul, that are
Vainer than mine were, dreams of dear things which death
Hath for ever broken; and lead thy life
To a brief shadowless place, into an hour
Made splendid to affront the coming night
By passion over sense more grandly burning
Than purple lightning over golden corn,
When all the distance of the night resounds
With the approach of wind and terrible rain,
That march to torment it down to the ground. 
Judith, shall we not thus together make
Death admirable, yea, and triumph through
The gates of anguish with a prouder song
Than ever lifted a king’s heart, who rode
Back from his war, with nations whipt before him,
Into trumpeting Nineveh?

Judith
     Thou fool,
Death is nothing to me, and life is all. 
But what foul wrong have I done to thee, Ozias,
That thou shouldst go about to put such wrong
Into my life as these defiling words?

Ozias.  Is it defilement to hear love spoken?

Judith.  Yes! thou hast soiled me:  to know my beauty, Wherewith I loved Manasses, and still love, Has all these years dwelt in thy heart a dream Of favourite lust,—­O this is foul in my mind.

Ozias.  I meant not what thou callest lust, but love.

Judith
What matters that?  Thou hast desired me. 
And knowing that, I feel my beauty clutch
About my soul with a more wicked shame
Than if I lived corrupt with leprosy.

Ozias.  Wilt thou still let the dead have claim on thee?  Judith, wilt thou be married to a grave?

Judith
I am married to my love; and it is vile,
Yea, it is burning in me like a sin,
That when my love was absent, thy desire
Shouldst trespass where my love is single lord.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Emblems Of Love from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.