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Poems by Speranza

Chapter 270: I.
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About This Book

The collection gathers lyrical and narrative poems that blend political passion, religious reflection, and romantic and mythic storytelling. Many pieces mourn famine and social injustice, portray martyrdom and national aspiration, and offer exhortations and supplications on behalf of the homeland. Other poems translate or adapt European sagas, medieval romances, and devotional hymns, while shorter lyrics record love, loss, memory, and spiritual longing. The volume alternates rousing public verse with intimate personal pieces, moving between direct civic address, elegiac lament, narrative ballad, and contemplative lyric, unified by moral intensity and rhetorical richness.

I.

HOW beautiful, how beautiful you streamed upon my sight,
In glory and in grandeur, as a gorgeous sunset-light!
How softly, soul-subduing, fell your words upon mine ear,
Like low aerial music when some angel hovers near!
What tremulous, faint ecstacy to clasp your hand in mine,
Till the darkness fell upon me of a glory too divine!
The air around grew languid with our intermingled breath,
And in your beauty's shadow I sank motionless as death.
I saw you not, I heard not, for a mist was on my brain—
I only felt that life could give no joy like that again.


II.

And this was Love—I knew it not, but blindly floated on,
And now I'm on the ocean waste, dark, desolate, alone;
The waves are raging round me—I'm reckless where they guide;
No hope is left to light me, no strength to stem the tide.
As a leaf along the torrent, a cloud across the sky,
As dust upon the whirlwind, so my life is drifting by.
The dream that drank the meteor's light—the form from Heav'n has flown—
The vision and the glory, they are passing—they are gone.
Oh! love is frantic agony, and life one throb of pain;
Yet I would bear its darkest woes to dream that dream again.