Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.
By Richard HenryStoddard470 Oriental Songs
A
An idol on a silk divan;
She sits so still, and never speaks,
She holds a cup of mine;
’T is full of wine, and on her cheeks
Are stains and smears of wine.
I join thee on the silk divan:
There is no need to seek the land,
The rich bazaars where rubies shine;
For mines are in that little hand,
And on those little cheeks of thine.
Y
In a great golden goblet of wine;
She ’s as ripe as the wine, and as bold
As the glare of the gold:
But this little lady of mine,
I will not profane her in wine.
I go where the garden so still is
(The moon raining through),
To pluck the white bowls of the lilies,
And drink her in dew!
D
To the blandishments of wine:
Jars were made to drain, I think,
Wine, I know, was made to drink.
Should the potters make a jar
Out of this poor clay of mine,
Let the jar be filled with wine!
I
My home is the mountains so high;
But away o’er the lands and the waters,
Wherever I please, I can fly.
I dart from the wave to the cloud,
And when I am dead I shall slumber
With my own white wings for a shroud.
B
If such thy pleasure be;
Thy will is mine, what say I?
’T is more than mine to me.
My passion and my pain,
Take thou my life, ah, take it,
But spare me thy disdain!