In The South

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There is a princess in the South
  About whose beauty rumors hum
  Like honey-bees about the mouth
  Of roses dewdrops falter from;
  And O her hair is like the fine
  Clear amber of a jostled wine
  In tropic revels; and her eyes
  Are blue as rifts of Paradise.

  Such beauty as may none before
  Kneel daringly, to kiss the tips
  Of fingers such as knights of yore
  Had died to lift against their lips:
  Such eyes as might the eyes of gold
  Of all the stars of night behold
  With glittering envy, and so glare
  In dazzling splendor of despair.

  So, were I but a minstrel, deft
  At weaving, with the trembling strings
  Of my glad harp, the warp and weft
  Of rondels such as rapture sings,--
  I'd loop my lyre across my breast,
  Nor stay me till my knee found rest
  In midnight banks of bud and flower
  Beneath my lady's lattice-bower.

  And there, drenched with the teary dews,
  I'd woo her with such wondrous art
  As well might stanch the songs that ooze
  Out of the mockbird's breaking heart;
  So light, so tender, and so sweet
  Should be the words I would repeat,
  Her casement, on my gradual sight,
  Would blossom as a lily might.

© James Whitcomb Riley