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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 26. “…till our souls burn bright…”
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“…till our souls burn bright…”
At a Bridal
I shall be loved to-night: the waves will wind
Strong arms around me, and I shall not know
Thou liest in my lord’s arm folded low.
The kindly spray my yearning eyes will bind,
And so I shall not see love’s roses blow
In thy fair face what time my lord doth speak
His heart’s dear vow. I shall on either cheek
Be kissed by laughing waves; the waters’ flow
With soft caress will soothe and satisfy.
What need to wait for age with lingering pain
And torture show of unfulfilled desire
To rack and waste my body? Clear-souled, ay,
Full-limbed and willing, death’s calm rest I gain,
And quench in mid-sea love’s consuming fire.[i]
A Song
Smiles for the world and laughter, but for thee
Tears and my griefs and need of sympathy.
Toil all day lone without a pause for rest –
Slumber at night upon thy homing breast.
Weaving of veils to hide from curious eyes
The spirit and its sevenfold mysteries:
Communion sweet with thee, and ne’er a bar
To sever our betrothèd souls afar.[ii]
Except Thou Bless Me
I must be loved of thee:
Tired day in night
Reposes: spent with sound and blind with light,
I shelter ‘neath thy wings, O soul of sympathy –
Find room for me!
I must be lost in thee:
Who shall recall
The several drops of rain that singly fall
And in the ocean mingle? And from thy life’s sea
Who shall draw me?[iii]
A Lover’s Longing
Love, I would be alone with thee at dawn
Afar upon the sea’s tempestuous breast,
While hosts of light with dusky troops contest
The dominion of the waking world,
Till by triumph morn the night is hurled
From earth’s high crest,
And we into the splendour of the day are drawn.
Love, I would be alone with thee at night
Beneath the lofty, overarching sky,
While, one by one, God’s hand all silently
Unveils the trembling stars, and bids them shine
In their eternal purity divine,
Supreme on high,
Till our souls cast their shrouding, and burn bright.[iv]
Love’s Nearness
Your eyes meet mine – a surging throng between:
Our kindred spirits mingle all-unseen.
Pulse unto pulse, cry answers unto cry,
When comrade soul to comrade soul draws nigh.
Thoughts plead and grant without the need of speech:
Each hears a song quiver in the heart of each.
And, though your arms no trembling form enfold,
My life is sheltered from the storm and cold.[v]
— Elizabeth Gibson,
1902
[i] “At a Bridal” Elizabeth Gibson The Burden of Love (London 1902), p. 16
Gibson’s orientation is confirmed by her great-niece, Judy Greenway, who wrote: “Once, [Sydney Cockerell] told her she should not, in her poems, disguise the passion of a woman for a man as that of a man for a woman, but should write in her own voice. She replied simply that her love poems, and her strongest feelings, were addressed to women.” Dymock Poets and Friends: Journal of the Friends of the Dymock Poets, 2004 Issue No. 3, ps. 23-33
[ii] “Smiles for the world and laughter” Elizabeth Gibson The Burden of Love (London 1902), p. 17
[iii] “Except Thou Bless Me” Ibid., p. 19
[iv] “A Lover’s Longing” Ibid., p. 34
[v] “Love’s Nearness” Ibid., p. 38
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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