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Poem by John Keats
Lines
UNFELT unheard, unseen,
I've left my little queen,
Her languid arms in silver slumber lying:
Ah! through their nestling touch,
Who---who could tell how much
There is for madness---cruel, or complying?
Those faery lids how sleek!
Those lips how moist!---they speak,
In ripest quiet, shadows of sweet sounds:
Into my fancy's ear
Melting a burden dear,
How "Love doth know no fulness, nor no bounds."
True!---tender monitors!
I bend unto your laws:
This sweetest day for dalliance was born!
So, without more ado,
I'll feel my heaven anew,
For all the blushing of the hasty morn.
John Keats
John Keats's other poems:- On Receiving a Laurel Crown from Leigh Hunt
- Bards of Passion and of Mirth
- Specimen of Induction to a Poem
- Calidore
- On Fame
Poems of the other poets with the same name:
William Wordsworth Lines ("STRANGER! this hillock of misshapen stones") Samuel Coleridge Lines ("RICHER than miser o’er his countless hoards") Thomas Hood Lines ("Let Us Make a Leap, My Dear") Thomas Hardy Lines ("Before we part to alien thoughts and aims") Samuel Johnson Lines ("Wheresoe'er I turn my view") 1777Francis Thompson Lines ("O tree of many branches! One thou hast") Robert Burns Lines ("I MURDER hate by field or flood") 1790William Watson Lines (" Go, Verse, nor let the grass of tarrying grow") Letitia Landon Lines ("She kneels by the grave where her lover sleeps") Oliver Holmes Lines ("COME back to your mother, ye children, for shame") Joseph Drake Lines ("Day gradual fades, in evening gray") Ebenezer Elliott Lines ("FROM Shirecliffe, o’er a silent sea of trees") George Morris Lines ("O Love! the mischief thou hast done!") John Lockhart Lines ("When youthful faith hath fled") Thomas Talfourd Lines ("HOW simple in their grandeur are the forms ") Richard Trench Lines ("When we are dark and dead") John Reade Lines ("I KNELT down as I poured my spirit forth by that gray gate")
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