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The wounded Eros

Chapter 53: L
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About This Book

A long sonnet sequence traces an intense, often unreciprocated passion through images of nature, classical myth, and spiritual longing. The poet alternates ardent addresses to an idealized beloved with self-questioning, lament, and philosophical reflection, examining love's joy, pain, hope, and resignation. Recurring motifs—seasonal landscapes, sea and sky, and wounded mythic figures—shape meditations on desire, memory, and the poet's identity. The sequence moves between ardor and melancholy, culminating in contemplative acceptance and an elegiac sense of love's enduring but altered presence.

IS it then given to some, life’s happiest hours
To blissfully enjoy, in love’s delight?
Behold, ye gods! I look upon the sight!
I swoon and die, to feel that nature’s flowers
Do, in my own experience, their powers
Of giving fragrance lose within the night.
Yet would my heart reveal the lover’s plight,
And seek, in thy pursuit, celestial bowers.
Oh, tell me that thou art not cold and dumb
To my entreaties for one little part
Of what thou holdest in impiety!
Here at thy feet, I beg but for a crumb
Of love’s own comfort, for this aching heart,
That doth deserve its full satiety.

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