Pictures & poems/Venus Verticordia

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Pictures & poems
by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Venus Verticordia
1232905Pictures & poems — Venus VerticordiaDante Gabriel Rossetti



Venus Verticordia



VENUS VERTICORDIA


SHE hath the apple in her hand for thee,

Yet almost in her heart would hold it back;

She muses, with her eyes upon the track

Of that which in thy spirit they can see.

Haply, "Behold, he is at peace," saith she;

"Alas! the apple for his lips,—the dart

That follows its brief sweetness to his heart,—

The wandering of his feet perpetually!"


A little space her glance is still and coy,

But if she give the fruit that works her spell,

Those eyes shall flame as for her Phrygian boy.

Then shall her bird's strained throat the woe foretell,

And her far seas moan as a single shell,

And through her dark grove strike the light of Troy.