Analysis of Love Motives

Arthur Henry Adams 1872 (Lawrence) – 1936 (Sydney, New South Wales)



To You.
  SO you have come at last!
 And we nestle, each in each,
 As leans the pliant sea in the clean-curved limbs of her lover the beach;
 Merged in each other quite,
 Clinging, as in the tresses of trees dallies the troubadour night;
 Faint as a perfume, soft as wine,
 Yielding as moonlight—mine, all mine—
 So I have found you at last!  
  I dreamed; we dare not meet:
 The time is yet too soon;
 Swept with the tumult of perfect love, our souls from this life would swoon—
 For the fusion of our lives
 Is the sole great goal to which the vast creation vaguely drives;
 And only when I kiss your face
 Shall the last great trumpet shatter Space—
 I dreamed; we dare not meet!  
  Yet somewhere, hungry-eyed,
 You lie and listen with tears,
 Clogged with the flesh, and dulled with the sodden heritage of the years.
 And I am alien, lone,

Hedged with the palisades of self, shut in—a soul unknown.
 You, fashioned for me from Time's first day,
 I, moulded for you ere that dawn was grey,
 Wait hidden, hungry-eyed!  
  I lie in the lonely night;
 And you?—perhaps so near
 That if I should whisper your sweet soul-name you would joyously leap and hear!
 And yet perhaps so far,
 Drowned in the cosmic mist beyond the swirl of the farthest star;
 But over the universe yawning between,
 With wistful eyes you listen and lean,
 Alone in the lonely night!  
  Perhaps your thirsty arms
 Some stranger youth entwine,
 And you will yield him thin, faint kisses, thinking his lips are mine;
 He thinking that unawares
 He has caught, as once in a dream he caught, that miracle-glance of hers.
 The pathos of the thing that seems!
 Each clasping memories, kissing dreams.
 In passionate-thirsty arms!  

So you will yearn through life,
 Or maybe you did not wait:
 You married him, and his neutral smile you learnt to sullenly hate;
 Or you have lived a lie,
 And drank the mockery of his lips, believing that he was I.
 You dreamed, content that you loved him true,
 But the soul of your soul was dead to you—
 So I must yearn through life!  
  Or, starving and passionate still,
 To your dreams you were bravely true;
 You told the Night your secrets drear, and he laughed back at you;
 And even when you dreamed
 You heard his merciless laughter ring, and you sprang awake and screamed;
 Till Age kissed you with a kiss that sears,
 And you faded and withered with the years,
 Starving and passionate still!  
  But, hush! I had almost heard:
 Last night I dreamed your name;
 Like the soft, white tread of a faint, cool cloud to my desolate sky it came;
 Like a moth it drifted away,

And into the flame of the dawn it fluttered, dying into the day.
 Yet the wind in the whispering leaves
 The moan of your sobbing weaves—
  Hush!  I had almost heard.  
  Yet I should know your face!
 As mine, all mine, I claim
 That coil of hair that over your bosom smoulders— a yellow flame;
 And the cool, dim-curtained eyes,
 The crescent of your imperious chin, and the little moist mouth that cries.
 I have heard through the din of the years
 Your voice, with its tincture of tears—
 Yes, I remember your face!  
  Once in the drifting crowd
 I thought I had found a clue—
 A pale face pealed like an organ-note, and yet— oh! my heart—not you!
 She had your look, the same
 Ineffable sorrow of glad young eyes; but all the rest was shame.
 Perhaps she saw—for her eyes were wet—
 In me the soul she had one time met
 In eternity's drifting crowd!  

Perhaps 't is the desert of years
 That severs each from each,
 And out of the cavernous centuries to each other we blindly reach.
 You blossomed so long ago
 That only the Dawn and the Spring remember, and little, so little, they know!
 You wait on the hill of the first white morn,
 Straining dead eyes to me, unborn,
 Across the desert of years.  
  Or when I am dead at last,
 And my sovereignty have won,
 As merged in the dust of the gradual Past, unliving, I live on,
 You will rise with some far-off Spring,
 And back to the drear, dead days that were mine your piteous glance will fling.
 But, hush! I shall come in the rain-kissed night
 And whisper the words of our marriage-rite—
 So I shall find you at last!  
  Yet if we met.…
 I dreamed; we dare not meet.


Scheme abccddeebFggxxhhFijkl lmmidxxnnoodpeejxqqp rssttaaruaavvkkuwxxm myywhxxzzkjh1 aaxx2 2 1 kcc3 3 4 4 kbXx5 5 ddb2 f
Poetic Form
Metre 11 111111 0110101 11010100111101001 101101 10100101110101 11001111 1011111 1111111 111111 011111 11010101110111111 10101101 101111101010101 01011111 101110101 111111 11101 1101011 1101011010100101 0111001 1100111100101 110111111 111111111 110101 1100101 010111 1111101111111101 010111 100101010110101 1100101001 110111001 0100101 011101 110101 011111110101111 110101 11111001111100110 01010111 11100101 0100101 111111 1101111 11010110111111 111101 0101001110101111 111011111 1011111111 111111 11001001 11110101 11011101011111 010111 1111001010110101 111110111 0110010101 1001001 111111 111111 101111011111100111 10111001 00101101110100101 101001001 0111101 11111 111111 111111 111111011010101 001111 010110100100101111 111101101 11111011 1101011 100101 1111101 0111111010111111 111101 0100101111110111 011110101 010111111 01101 011101011 110111 011010010011101101 1101101 1100100101001011011 1110110111 10111111 0101011 1111111 0110011 110011010011111 11111111 011011110111111 1111100111 01001110101 1111111 1111 111111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,254
Words 765
Sentences 37
Stanzas 5
Stanza Lengths 21, 20, 20, 20, 18
Lines Amount 99
Letters per line (avg) 32
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 633
Words per stanza (avg) 152
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:50 min read
30

Arthur Henry Adams

Arthur Henry Adams was a journalist and author. He started his career in New Zealand, though he spent most of it in Australia, and for a short time lived in China and London.  more…

All Arthur Henry Adams poems | Arthur Henry Adams Books

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