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Poems

Chapter 93: OUTRE MORT
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About This Book

A varied collection of lyric and narrative verse that moves between short songs, sonnets, rondels, and longer meditative pieces. Many poems use pastoral and seasonal imagery to celebrate fields, harvest, and the sensory life of the natural world while also acknowledging the hardships and dignity of rural labor. Recurring themes include love, absence, memory, and spiritual longing, treated with formal variety and musical language. The tone alternates between celebratory, elegiac, and reflective, blending vivid description with moral and emotional observation.

OUTRE MORT

You came to me in visions of the night,
Your pale brow bound by a bright ring of flame;
High, unapproachable, and dazzling white,
You came.
I rose and called you by your dearest name;—
“Tell me,” I said, “how go the hours’ flight
In that far land? Do men strive there for Fame
And Love?” Then I lost sense and sight:
You bent to me,—your kisses were the same
As when, long since, to be my life’s delight
You came.