Lullaby
W.H.
Auden
Lay
your sleeping head, my love,
Human
on my faithless arm;
Time
and fevers burn away
Individual
beauty from
Thoughtful
children, and the grave
Proves
the child ephemeral:
But
in my arms till break of day
Let
the living creature lie,
Mortal,
guilty, but to me
The
entirely beautiful.
Soul
and body have no bounds:
To
lovers as they lie upon
Her
tolerant enchanted slope
In
their ordinary swoon,
Grave
the vision Venus sends
Of
supernatural sympathy,
Universal
love and hope;
While
an abstract insight wakes
Among
the glaciers and the rocks
The
hermit's carnal ecstasy.
Certainty,
fidelity
On
the stroke of midnight pass
Like
vibrations of a bell
And
fashionable madmen raise
Their
pedantic boring cry:
Every
farthing of the cost,
All
the dreaded cards foretell,
Shall
be paid, but from this night
Not
a whisper, not a thought,
Not
a kiss nor look be lost.
Beauty,
midnight, vision dies:
Let
the winds of dawn that blow
Softly
round your dreaming head
Such
a day of welcome show
Eye
and knocking heart may bless,
Find
our mortal world enough;
Noons
of dryness find you fed
By
the involuntary powers,
Nights
of insult let you pass
Watched
by every human love.
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