Ad Manus Puellae

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I was always a lover of ladies' hands!
  Or ever mine heart came here to tryst,
  For the sake of your carved white hands' commands;
  The tapering fingers, the dainty wrist;
  The hands of a girl were what I kissed.

  I remember an hand like a _fleur-de-lys_
  When it slid from its silken sheath, her glove;
  With its odours passing ambergris:
  And that was the empty husk of a love.
  Oh, how shall I kiss your hands enough?

  They are pale with the pallor of ivories;
  But they blush to the tips like a curled sea-shell:
  What treasure, in kingly treasuries,
  Of gold, and spice for the thurible,
  Is sweet as her hands to hoard and tell?

  I know not the way from your finger-tips,
  Nor how I shall gain the higher lands,
  The citadel of your sacred lips:
  I am captive still of my pleasant bands,
  The hands of a girl, and most your hands.

© Ernest Christopher Dowson