John MacPhereson

John MacPhereson Poems

1.

Ah, what can ail thee, wretched wight?
The fire in thy eyes is dead,
...

2.

At times, on long winter nights, I feel
Like an astronaut, orbiting the plane
Between universal beauty and planetary
Lust. I float in the bosom of forgotten
...

Your love is like an addiction,
Violent and beautiful, black tar
Burning the shimmering spoon
Midnight, a needle piercing
...

Ah beauty, thou sweet nymph of
Enticing pleasure, that has enthralled my
Blood to burn. A gypsy fire born of
Mid-night passion and bred of love.
...

Have I told you that I've missed you?
That every hour that passes is an hour
I'd rather spend in your arms? Dancing
In the rain has no meaning without
...

I lay you down in these bed of roses,
Flush with the Crimson of my soul -
The thorns of love have bleed me dry -
The edges blunted on my flesh delight
...

I sit upon a throne of silence,
Within the borders of unopened
Mouths, a kingdom built on the aching
Hours between the voiceless and the dead.
...

There is a lapse in my memory
From the time you leave till your return,
Only the dreams remain, waking dreams
That follow the course of waking love,
...

Have I warned you of the dawn?

How just before the hour strikes
My tongue will slake its thirst
...

Standing at the edge of the beach
and the border of the vast empire
of the sea, the waves crash over
me like true-blue orgasms whispering
...

She looked equal parts love and lust,
gyrating in her skirt of clouds. Her
tongue mouthed out my own desire
as a ring on the finger flitted in the
...

A wild surge is in the air tonight,
The pipes of Pan play in delight,
A sweet hearted arrow shot ages
ago has rekindled the vast pages
...

The Best Poem Of John MacPhereson

La B.Elle D.Ame S.An M.Erci

1.

Ah, what can ail thee, wretched wight?
The fire in thy eyes is dead,
Pale and cold, all woe-begone,
upon this trail that you tread.
Speaketh, thou voice of reason, and hear
this tale of love more cold than dear.

As I walked upon the corner
of River and The Cold Hill Side,
no birds, with sad songs, were singing
but within, hollow tears were cried
'pon the flow of hearts eternal guise
where green envy buy's a lovers prize

There I saw a faery's child,
a lily resting on her brow,
and all of the nights pleasure paid
that I may to that Goddess bow,
as if within that design of love
I could ascend to heaven above.

Upon her neck a diamond chain;
and bracelets also did I place
that so softly sweet did she moan
of thoughtless lovers embrace,
I had half a hope and want of more
that I could or would this hope explore.

2.

I lay upon this bed of nails,
of timbrel whips that sing my name.
I hear the scream of pleasure say
'for what sweet nymph hath I to blame? '
When the throbbing of thy Siren call
sounds so like the cat of nines sweet fall.

Tied to the mast of pleasures cruel,
thou mistress of divine neglect,
tread upon the whispered delight
that hath my soul in fury wrecked,
with anguished plea, of pleasures sore,
I beg thou Goddess of love for more.

The heart of passion thus spins 'pon
that tip of ancient misery,
as the thirsty thrust of visions
beauty penetrates thy mercy,
The soft kiss of teeth on tender skin
increases the furor of our sin.

then in thrall of passion spent,
I call upon thy Goddess grace
and in thy worship thus submit
to ambrosias mid-night embrace
and sated by sweet addictions fix
I succumb to the whisper of Nyx.

3.

Lo, in far off ancient grotto,
where no songbird could ever sing
I rested till t'was almost dawn
when a quiet knell began to ring
by the river and the cold hill side,
Wherein no man would or could reside.

With each clang the Toll grew nearer
every clash louder than the last
'til the rhythm ceased its function
at the foot of the line I cast.
rising out that ancient ocean tomb,
three hollow men from her ancient womb.

Ah, sweet love, what despair is this!
The ghostly hollows of this dream
hath spoke of future lovers past,
and just as ghastly as they seem,
these poor, miserable and wretched wights,
are lost to the indolence of nights.

And if I could I would have fled
to the forest beyond the sun
where even now the light still shines
on the frailness that I shun.
I hear those dark voices calling me
and I know they speak of only thee.

4.

A pale prince, a knight of love,
a keatian poet all say as one:
'La Belle Dame San Merci hath
thee in thrall, though the night is done
and the withered soul is all that's left
of a heart thats forever bereft.'

I froze in winters reverie,
I could not find my tongue to speak,
nor could I move in such a frost
of thoughts abandoned by the weak.
They spoke again, oh, what evil haunts
the hollow vastness of these taunts?

'La Belle Dame San Merci hath
bound thee forever to her thrall'
and then as one they retreated
to that forsaken river hall,
composed of this mid-night dreams reform
where past, present, and future conform

I woke, pale and cold, alone
by the middle of the bedside,
and that is why I sojourn here
by this river's inconstant tide,
waiting in the shadow of the night
for thou Goddess of all lover's light.

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