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1865–1904

Lallji my Desire

Violet Nicolson

“This is no time for saying‘ no’” Were thy last words to me, And yet my lips refused the kiss They might have given thee.

How could I know That thou wouldst go To sleep so far from me? They took thee to the Burning-Ghat,

Oh, Lallji, my desire, And now a faint and lonely flame Uprises from the pyre. The thin grey smoke in spirals drifts

Across the opal sky. Would that I were a wife of thine, And thus with thee could die! How could I know

That thou wouldst go, Oh, Lallji, my desire? The lips I missed The flames have kissed

Upon the Sandal pyre. If one should meet me with a knife And cut my heart in twain, Then would he see the smoke arise

From every severed vein. Such is the burning, inward fire, The anguish of my pain, For my Beloved, whose dying lips

Implored a kiss — in vain! How could I know That thou wouldst go, Oh, Lallji, my desire?

Too young thou art To lay thy heart Upon the Sandal pyre. Thy wife awaits her coming child;

What were a child to me, If I might take thee in these arms And face the flames with thee? The priests are chanting round the pyre,

At dusk they will depart And leave to thee thy lonely rest, To me my lonelier heart. How could I know

Thou lovedst me so? Upon the Sandal pyre He lies forsaken. The flames have taken

My Lallji, my desire!

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Lallji my Desire · Violet Nicolson · Poetry Cove