Love
by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
English romantic poet, philosopher and critic. His works include Poems on Various Subjects (1796), Lyrical Ballads (1798) written with Wordsworth and which includes The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, conversation poems Fears in Solitude, Frost at Midnight, This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison, The Nightingale and the "dream" poem Kubla Khan (1797-8). His love poems include Love (1799); Dejection: an Ode (1902) was about his addiction to opium. Sibylline Leaves (1817) was the first of his collected works. His major work the Biographia Literaria was written after his rediscovery of Christianity and Aids to Reflection (1825) and Church and State (1830) are religious prose. Along with Wordsworth, Coleridge was one of the founders of the Romantic movement. Other romantic poets include Byron, Keats, Burns and Wordsworth.
Love
|
All thoughts, all passions, all delights, Oft in my waking dreams do I The moonshine stealing o'er the scene She leant against the armed man, Few sorrows hath she of her own, I played a soft and doleful air, She listened with a flitting blush, I told her of the Knight that wore I told her how he pined: and ah! She listened with a flitting blush, But when I told the cruel scorn That sometimes from the savage den, There came and looked him in the face And that, unknowing what he did, And how she wept, and clasped his knees; And that she nursed him in a cave; His dying words -but when I reached All impulses of soul and sense And hopes, and fears that kindle hope, She wept with pity and delight, Her bosom heaved -she stepped aside, She half enclosed me with her arms, 'Twas partly love, and partly fear, I calmed her fears, and she was calm, |