The Vampire

Summary


"The Vampire" is a short poem by Madison Julius Cawein that pulls readers into a world of dangerous beauty and supernatural obsession. A man recalls his encounter with a pale, otherworldly woman — her moonlit face, green-gray dress, dark hair, and coldly burning lips. The kiss he steals from her white throat becomes a curse rather than a conquest, as her whispered witch-words bind him to a fiend for life. Sensual and sinister, the poem captures the helpless pull of a love that may be damnation.

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A lily in a twilight place?
A moonflow’r in the lonely night?—
Strange beauty of a woman’s face
Of wildflow’r-white!

The rain that hangs a star’s green ray
Slim on a leaf-point’s restlessness,
Is not so glimmering green and gray
As was her dress.

I drew her dark hair from her eyes,
And in their deeps beheld a while
Such shadowy moonlight as the skies
Of Hell may smile.

She held her mouth up redly wan,
And burning cold,—I bent and kissed
Such rosy snow as some wild dawn
Makes of a mist.

God shall not take from me that hour,
When round my neck her white arms clung!
When ‘neath my lips, like some fierce flower,
Her white throat swung!

Or words she murmured while she leaned!
Witch-words, she holds me softly by,—
The spell that binds me to a fiend
Until I die.

Credits

Madison Julius Cawein was an American poet from Louisville, Kentucky, active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, often called the "Keats of Kentucky" for his richly atmospheric verse. "The Vampire" showcases his gift for weaving Gothic sensuality with vivid natural imagery, from lily-white moonflowers to the hellish moonlight lurking in a woman's eyes.