Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Year of Love by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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The Year of Love

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    There were four loves that one by one,
    Following the seasons and the sun,
    Passed over without tears, and fell
    Away without farewell.

    The first was made of gold and tears,
    The next of aspen-leaves and fears,
    The third of rose-boughs and rose-roots,
    The last love of strange fruits.

    These were the four loves faded. Hold
    Some minutes fast the time of gold
    When our lips each way clung and clove
    To a face full of love.

    The tears inside our eyelids met,
    Wrung forth with kissing, and wept wet
    The faces cleaving each to each
    Where the blood served for speech.

    The second, with low patient brows
    Bound under aspen-coloured boughs
    And eyes made strong and grave with sleep
    And yet too weak to weep

    The third, with eager mouth at ease
    Fed from late autumn honey, lees
    Of scarce gold left in latter cells
    With scattered flower-smells

    Hair sprinkled over with spoilt sweet
    Of ruined roses, wrists and feet
    Slight-swathed, as grassy-girdled sheaves
    Hold in stray poppy-leaves

    The fourth, with lips whereon has bled
    Some great pale fruit’s slow colour, shed
    From the rank bitten husk whence drips
    Faint blood between her lips

    Made of the heat of whole great Junes
    Burning the blue dark round their moons
    (Each like a mown red marigold)
    So hard the flame keeps hold

    These are burnt thoroughly away.
    Only the first holds out a day
    Beyond these latter loves that were
    Made of mere heat and air.

    And now the time is winterly
    The first love fades too: none will see,
    When April warms the world anew,
    The place wherein love grew.



Extra Info:
From "Poems and Ballads" - 1866


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