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Praise Of My Lady

By William Morris

Topics: classic

My lady seems of ivory     Forehead, straight nose, and cheeks that be     Hollow'd a little mournfully.                 Beata mea Domina!     Her forehead, overshadow'd much     By bows of hair, has a wave such     As God was good to make for me.                 Beata mea Domina!     Not greatly long my lady's hair,     Nor yet with yellow colour fair,     But thick and crispd wonderfully:                 Beata mea Domina!     Heavy to make the pale face sad,     And dark, but dead as though it had     Been forged by God most wonderfully                 Beata mea Domina!     Of some strange metal, thread by thread,     To stand out from my lady's head,     Not moving much to tangle me.                 Beata mea Domina!     Beneath her brows the lids fall slow.     The lashes a clear shadow throw     Where I would wish my lips to be.                 Beata mea Domina!     Her great eyes, standing far apart,     Draw up some memory from her heart,     And gaze out very mournfully;                 Beata mea Domina!     So beautiful and kind they are,     But most times looking out afar,     Waiting for something, not for me.                 Beata mea Domina!     I wonder if the lashes long     Are those that do her bright eyes wrong,     For always half tears seem to be                 Beata mea Domina!     Lurking below the underlid,     Darkening the place where they lie hid:     If they should rise and flow for me!                 Beata mea Domina!     Her full lips being made to kiss,     Curl'd up and pensive each one is;     This makes me faint to stand and see.                 Beata mea Domina!     Her lips are not contented now,     Because the hours pass so slow     Towards a sweet time: (pray for me),                 Beata mea Domina!     Nay, hold thy peace! for who can tell?     But this at least I know full well,     Her lips are parted longingly,                 Beata mea Domina!     So passionate and swift to move,     To pluck at any flying love,     That I grow faint to stand and see.                 Beata mea Domina!     Yea! there beneath them is her chin,     So fine and round, it were a sin     To feel no weaker when I see                 Beata mea Domina!     God's dealings; for with so much care     And troublous, faint lines wrought in there,     He finishes her face for me.                 Beata mea Domina!     Of her long neck what shall I say?     What things about her body's sway,     Like a knight's pennon or slim tree                 Beata mea Domina!     Set gently waving in the wind;     Or her long hands that I may find     On some day sweet to move o'er me?                 Beata mea Domina!     God pity me though, if I miss'd     The telling, how along her wrist     The veins creep, dying languidly                 Beata mea Domina!     Inside her tender palm and thin.     Now give me pardon, dear, wherein     My voice is weak and vexes thee.                 Beata mea Domina!     All men that see her any time,     I charge you straightly in this rhyme,     What, and wherever you may be,                 Beata mea Domina!     To kneel before her; as for me,     I choke and grow quite faint to see     My lady moving graciously.                 Beata mea Domina!

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"My lady seems of ivory..."

This evocative piece by William Morris, titled "Praise Of My Lady", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:William Morris

"My lady seems of ivory..." by William Morris

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William Morris

About William Morris

William Morris (1834–1896) was an English poet, artist, and socialist reformer associated with the Pre-Raphaelites and the Arts and Crafts movement. His epic poems "The Earthly Paradise" and "Sigurd the Volsung" draw on medieval legend and Norse mythology.

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