Song

H. D.

 
You are as gold
as the half-ripe grain
that merges to gold again,
as white as the white rain
that beats through
the half-opened flowers
of the great flower tufts
thick on the black limbs
of an Illyrian apple bough.
  Can honey distill such fragrance
As your bright hairó
For your face is as fair as rain,
  yet as rain that lies clear
  on white honey-comb,
lends radiance to the white wax,
so your hair on your brow
casts light for a shadow.
 
From Hymen, 1921.

Poems by This Author

Helen in Egypt, Eidolon, Book III: 4 by H. D.
Did her eyes slant in the old way?
Helen in Egypt, Pallinode, Books I & III by H. D.
At Baia by H. D.
I should have thought
Heat by H. D.
O wind, rend open the heat,
Helen by H. D.
All Greece hates
Lais by H. D.
Let her who walks in Paphos
Moonrise by H. D.
Will you glimmer on the sea?
Orchard by H. D.
I saw the first pear
Oread by H. D.
Whirl up, sea
Pear Tree by H. D.
Silver dust
Prayer by H. D.
White, O white face
Sea Rose by H. D.
Rose, harsh rose
Sitalkas by H. D.
Thou art come at length
Stars Wheel in Purple by H. D.
Stars wheel in purple, yours is not so rare
The Helmsman by H. D.
O be swift
The Pool by H. D.
Are you alive?


Further Reading

Poems for Mother's Day
It's all I have to bring today (26)
by Emily Dickinson
Jugglers
by Francisco Aragón
Mother
by Lola Ridge
Mother
by Herman de Coninck
Mother's Day
by David Young
The Angel that presided 'oer my birth
by William Blake
To My Mother
by Christina Rossetti
To My Mother
by Edgar Allan Poe
To My Mother
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Video: Having a Coke with You
by Frank O'Hara
won't you celebrate with me
by Lucille Clifton
[Sonnets are full of love, and this my tome]
by Christina Rossetti