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1865–1914

TWO.

Madison Julius Cawein

With her soft face half turned to me, Like an arrested moonbeam, she Stood in the cirque of that deep tree. I took her by the hands; she raised

Her face to mine; and, half amazed, Remembered; and we stood and gazed. How good to kiss her throat and hair, And say no word!— Her throat was bare;

As some moon-fungus white and fair. Had God not giv'n us life for this? The world-old, amorous happiness Of arms that clasp, and lips that kiss!

The eloquence of limbs and arms! The rhetoric of breasts, whose charms Say to the sluggish blood what warms! Had God or Fiend assigned this hour

That bloomed,— where love had all of power,— The senses’ aphrodisiac flower? The dawn was far away. Nude night Hung savage stars of sultry white

Around her bosom's Ethiop light. Night! night, who gave us each to each, Where heart with heart could hold sweet speech, With life's best gift within our reach.

And here it was — between the goals Of flesh and spirit, sex controls — Took place the marriage of our souls.

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TWO. · Madison Julius Cawein · Poetry Cove