A Dedication. To Charlotte Cushman.
Sidney Lanier
As Love will carve dear names upon a tree, Symbol of gravure on his heart to be, So thought I thine with loving text to set In the growth and substance of my canzonet; But, writing it, my tears begin to fall -- This wild-rose stem for thy large name's too small! Nay, still my trembling hands are fain, are fain Cut the good letters though they lap again; Perchance such folk as mark the blur and stain Will say, `It was the beating of the rain;' Or, haply these o'er-woundings of the stem May loose some little balm, to plead for them.
Next 10 Poems
- Sidney Lanier : A Florida Ghost.
- Sidney Lanier : A Florida Sunday.
- Sidney Lanier : A Sea-shore Grave. To M. J. L.
- Sidney Lanier : A Song Of Eternity In Time
- Sidney Lanier : A Song Of The Future.
- Sidney Lanier : A Sunrise Song.
- Sidney Lanier : Acknowledgment.
- Sidney Lanier : An Evening Song.
- Sidney Lanier : An Frau Nannette Falk-auerbach.
- Sidney Lanier : At First. To Charlotte Cushman.
Previous 10 Poems
- Sidney Lanier : A Birthday Song. To S. G.
- Sidney Lanier : A Ballad Of The Trees And The Master
- Walter Savage Landor : You Smiled, You Spoke, And I Believed
- Walter Savage Landor : Years
- Walter Savage Landor : Why, Why Repine
- Walter Savage Landor : Who Ever Felt As I?
- Walter Savage Landor : What News
- Walter Savage Landor : Well I Remember How You Smiled
- Walter Savage Landor : Very True, The Linnets Sing
- Walter Savage Landor : Verse