Oscar Wilde

La Bella Donna Della Mia Mente

La Bella Donna Della Mia Mente - meaning Summary

Idealized, Suffering Love

Wilde's poem presents an ardent speaker consumed by longing for an idealized woman. He describes physical weariness from pursuit and praises her beauty in rich, sensory images—hair, lips, neck, hands—while framing her as both object of desire and fragile, suffering figure. The voice alternates admiration and anguish, casting love as pleasurable yet painful and the beloved as simultaneously radiant and desolate.

Read Complete Analyses

My limbs are wasted with a flame, My feet are sore with travelling, For calling on my Lady's name My lips have now forgot to sing. O Linnet in the wild-rose brake Strain for my Love thy melody, O Lark sing louder for love's sake, My gentle Lady passeth by. She is too fair for any man To see or hold his heart's delight, Fairer than Queen or courtezan Or moon-lit water in the night. Her hair is bound with myrtle leaves, (Green leaves upon her golden hair!) Green grasses through the yellow sheaves Of autumn corn are not more fair. Her little lips, more made to kiss Than to cry bitterly for pain, Are tremulous as brook-water is, Or roses after evening rain. Her neck is like white melilote Flushing for pleasure of the sun, The throbbing of the linnet's throat Is not so sweet to look upon. As a pomegranate, cut in twain, White-seeded, is her crimson mouth, Her cheeks are as the fading stain Where the peach reddens to the south. O twining hands! O delicate White body made for love and pain! O House of love! O desolate Pale flower beaten by the rain!

default user
PoetryVerse just now

Feel free to be first to leave comment.

8/2200 - 0