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Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

I lived from 1840-1922. I was from England, and am in the English category.

Second son of Francis Blunt and born into an old Sussex family. When he was eighteen he entered the British diplomatic corps and he worked in Athens, Constantinople, Frankfurt, Lisbon, Madrid, Paris and Argentina.

Read full description by Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition...

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  • I do not care for kisses. "Tis a debt
    We paid for the first privilege of love.
    13 lines, 1 comment
  • Oh! leave the past to buy its own dead.
    The past is naught to us, the present all.
    14 lines, 65,535 comments
  • I LONG have had a quarrel set with Time
    Because he robb'd me. Every day of life
    14 lines
  • DARK to me is the earth. Dark to me are the heavens.
      Where is she that I loved, the woman with eyes like stars?
    59 lines
  • I DID not choose thee, dearest. It was Love
    That made the choice, not I. Mine eyes were blind
    13 lines
  • SEVEN weeks of sea, and twice seven days of storm
    Upon the huge Atlantic, and once more
    14 lines
  • I LIKE the hunting of the hare
    Better than that of the fox;
    84 lines, 3 comments
  • TO-DAY, all day, I rode upon the down,
    With hounds and horsemen, a brave company
    15 lines
  • BRAVE as a falcon and as merciless, 
    With bright eyes watching still the world, thy prey, 
    14 lines
  • O FLY not, Pleasure, pleasant-hearted Pleasure;
    Fold me thy wings, I prithee, yet and stay:
    15 lines
  • I have seen many things in many lands,
    And many sorrows known and many joys,
    13 lines
  • What is my quarrel with thee, beautiful sea,
    That thus I cannot love thy waves or thee,
    82 lines
  • O child of Joy! What idle life is thine!
    Thou, in these meadows, while thy skies are blue,
    19 lines
  • I WOULD I had thy courage, dear, to face 
    This bankruptcy of love, and greet despair 
    15 lines
  • How beautiful is life--the physical joy of sense and breathing;
    The glory of the world which has found speech and speaks to us;
    384 lines
  • When is life other than a tragedy,
    Whether it is played in tears from the first scene,
    13 lines
  • I have a thing to say. But how to say it?
    I have a cause to plead. But to what ears?
    513 lines
  • The castle walls are full of eyes,
    And not a mouse may creep unseen.
    208 lines
  • THERE is no laughter in the natural world
    Of beast or fish or bird, though no sad doubt
    15 lines
  • Love has its secrets, joy has its revealings.
    How shall I speak of that which love has hid?
    68 lines
  • O WORLD, in very truth thou art too young;
    When wilt thou learn to wear the garb of age?
    32 lines
  • HE who has once been happy is for aye
      Out of destruction's reach. His fortune then
    28 lines
  • We spent a day together,
    One day of all our lives,
    75 lines
  • 'Tis time, my soul, thou shouldst be purged of pride.
    What men are these with thee, whose ill deeds done
    14 lines
  • Care killed a cat, and I have cares at home,
    Which vex me nightly and disturb my bed.
    13 lines
  • A little honey! Ay, a little sweet,
    A little pleasure when the years were young,
    13 lines
  • Ah, Paris, Paris! What an echo rings
    Still in those syllables of vain delight!
    13 lines
  • I dreamed
    A dream of you,
    46 lines
  • How many hymns have I chaunted, Lady, in laud of thee,
    Each with a sigh for its burthen, tear for its antiphon?
    28 lines
  • Crowns are for kings to wear, sad crowns of gold
    Over tired heads that ache, world--cares untold.
    17 lines

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