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Songs of the unblind Cupid cover

Songs of the unblind Cupid

Chapter 4: LOVE A-LIMPING.
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About This Book

A sequence of lyrical poems examines love in its many guises—passion, longing, joy, pain, idealized devotion and sensual desire—using vivid natural and musical imagery (flowers, vines, a violin, birds) and concise narrative vignettes. Voices shift between exuberant celebration and mournful reflection, probing youth, aging, fidelity, and redemption while sometimes invoking religious or mythic motifs. Language emphasizes intense sensory detail and rhythmic cadences that blend tenderness, eroticism, and ethical questioning. Short pieces range from playful satire to solemn consolation, together forming a compact, imagistic survey of romantic feeling and its contradictions.

LOVE A-LIMPING.

A rhyming gallant, once, on wing above,
Rode Pegasus to Venus’ Court of Love;
Whereat her pretty brats came running out
To hold the heavenly horse and kiss his snout,
And pat his flank, and preen his plumey wing,
And hearken with delight his nickering;
And of his restlessness recked not, till put
Was pawing hoof on one sweet baby foot;
Then might been seen a truly curious thing,
Cupid blubbering at a horse’s bit-ring.
Quo’ poet, laughing: “Faith, I did not know
That pains of Love were ever in the toe!”
“Not that,” the darling said, “Boo-hoo!—but—shame!
No lady—e’er will—he-heed—a Love—so lame!”
In his own tears kind Venus washed his face,
And wiped it with her golden tresses’ fleece—
“Don’t cry, dear boy, for mother wills it so
That even limping Loves may often conquests know.”
In love faults foretell the future
Because only organic faults survive—
The offence that has been will be.
Liberty is a God-name forever taken in vain.