Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
II. Loves NatureThe Annoyer
Nathaniel Parker Willis (18061867)L
And every shape of earth,
And comes, unbidden, everywhere,
Like thought’s mysterious birth.
The moonlit sea and the sunset sky
Are written with Love’s words,
And you hear his voice unceasingly,
Like song, in the time of birds.
From the tip of a stooping plume,
And the serried spears, and the many men,
May not deny him room.
He ’ll come to his tent in the weary night,
And be busy in his dream,
And he ’ll float to his eye in the morning light,
Like a fay on a silver beam.
And rides on the echo back,
And sighs in his ear like a stirring leaf,
And flits in his woodland track.
The shade of the wood, and the sheen of the river,
The cloud, and the open sky,—
He will haunt them all with his subtle quiver,
Like the light of your very eye.
And ponders the silver sea,
For Love is under the surface hid,
And a spell of thought has he:
He heaves the wave like a bosom sweet,
And speaks in the ripple low,
Till the bait is gone from the crafty line,
And the hook hangs bare below.
And intrudes in the maiden’s prayer,
And profanes the cell of the holy man
In the shape of a lady fair.
In the darkest night, and the bright daylight,
In earth, and sea, and sky,
In every home of human thought,
Will Love be lurking nigh.