Английская поэзия


ГлавнаяБиографииСтихи по темамСлучайное стихотворениеПереводчикиСсылкиАнтологии
Рейтинг поэтовРейтинг стихотворений

Edna St. Vincent Millay (Эдна Сент-Винсент Миллей)


* * *


Sometimes when I am wearied suddenly
Of all the things that are the outward you,
And my gaze wanders ere your tale is through
To webs of my own weaving, or I see
Abstractedly your hands about your knee
And wonder why I love you as I do,
Then I recall, “Yet Sorrow thus he drew”;
Then I consider, “Pride thus painted he.”
Oh, friend, forget not, when you fain would note
In me a beauty that was never mine,
How first you knew me in a book I wrote,
How first you loved me for a written line:
So are we bound till broken is the throat
Of Song, and Art no more leads out the Nine.



Edna St. Vincent Millay's other poems:
  1. The Last White Sawdust
  2. I, Being Born a Woman
  3. Euclid Alone Has Looked
  4. So She Came Back
  5. She Filled Her Arms with Wood


Распечатать стихотворение. Poem to print Распечатать (To print)

Количество обращений к стихотворению: 1584


Последние стихотворения


To English version


Рейтинг@Mail.ru

Английская поэзия