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A continuing selection of classic and contemporary poems.

Waikiki

Rupert Brooke

Warm perfumes like a breath from vine and tree
 Drift down the darkness.  Plangent, hidden from eyes
 Somewhere an ‘eukaleli’ thrills and cries
And stabs with pain the night’s brown savagery.
And dark scents whisper; and dim waves creep to me,
 Gleam like a woman’s hair, stretch out, and rise;
 And new stars burn into the ancient skies,
Over the murmurous soft Hawaian sea.

And I recall, lose, grasp, forget again,
 And still remember, a tale I have heard, or known,
An empty tale, of idleness and pain,
 Of two that loved—or did not love—and one
Whose perplexed heart did evil, foolishly,
A long while since, and by some other sea.
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Rupert Brooke’s Collected Poems | 1915
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