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La Nue

By Alan Seeger

Topics: classic

Oft when sweet music undulated round,      Like the full moon out of a perfumed sea     Thine image from the waves of blissful sound      Rose and thy sudden light illumined me.     And in the country, leaf and flower and air      Would alter and the eternal shape emerge;     Because they spoke of thee the fields seemed fair,      And Joy to wait at the horizon's verge.     The little cloud-gaps in the east that filled      Gray afternoons with bits of tenderest blue     Were windows in a palace pearly-silled      That thy voluptuous traits came glimmering through.     And in the city, dominant desire      For which men toil within its prison-bars,     I watched thy white feet moving in the mire      And thy white forehead hid among the stars.     Mystical, feminine, provoking, nude,      Radiant there with rosy arms outspread,     Sum of fulfillment, sovereign attitude,      Sensual with laughing lips and thrown-back head,     Draped in the rainbow on the summer hills,      Hidden in sea-mist down the hot coast-line,     Couched on the clouds that fiery sunset fills,      Blessed, remote, impersonal, divine;     The gold all color and grace are folded o'er,      The warmth all beauty and tenderness embower, -     Thou quiverest at Nature's perfumed core,      The pistil of a myriad-petalled flower.     Round thee revolves, illimitably wide,      The world's desire, as stars around their pole.     Round thee all earthly loveliness beside      Is but the radiate, infinite aureole.     Thou art the poem on the cosmic page -      In rubric written on its golden ground -     That Nature paints her flowers and foliage      And rich-illumined commentary round.     Thou art the rose that the world's smiles and tears      Hover about like butterflies and bees.     Thou art the theme the music of the spheres      Echoes in endless, variant harmonies.     Thou art the idol in the altar-niche      Faced by Love's congregated worshippers,     Thou art the holy sacrament round which      The vast cathedral is the universe.     Thou art the secret in the crystal where,      For the last light upon the mystery Man,     In his lone tower and ultimate despair,      Searched the gray-bearded Zoroastrian.     And soft and warm as in the magic sphere,      Deep-orbed as in its erubescent fire,     So in my heart thine image would appear,      Curled round with the red flames of my desire.

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"Oft when sweet music undulated round,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Alan Seeger delivers a powerful performance in "La Nue"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:Alan Seeger

"Oft when sweet music undulated round,..." by Alan Seeger

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Alan Seeger

About Alan Seeger

Alan Seeger (1888–1916) was an American poet who fought in the French Foreign Legion during World War I. His poem "I Have a Rendezvous with Death" is one of the most famous war poems, and he was killed in action at the Battle of the Somme.

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