11th century
 A free interpretation of the Chauraspanchasika 
Even now
 My thought is all of this gold-tinted king's daughter
 With garlands tissue and golden buds,
 Smoke tangles of her hair, and sleeping or waking
 Feet trembling in love, full of pale languor;
 My thought is clinging as to a lost learning
 Slipped down out of the minds of men,
 Labouring to bring her back into my soul. 
Even now
 If I see in my soul the citron-breasted fair one
 Still gold-tinted, her face like our night stars,
 Drawing unto her; her body beaten about with flame,
 Wounded by the flaring spear of love,
 My first of all by reason of her fresh years,
 Then is my heart buried alive in snow. 
Even now
 If my girl with lotus eyes came to me again
 Weary with the dear weight of young love,
 Again I would give her to these starved twins of arms
 And from her mouth drink down the heavy wine,
 As a reeling pirate bee in fluttered ease
 Steals up the honey from the nenuphar. 
Even now
 I bring her back, ah, wearied out with love
 So that her slim feet could not bear her up;
 Curved falls of her hair down on her white cheeks;
 In the confusion of her coloured vests
 Speaking that guarded giving up, and her scented arms
 Lay like cool bindweed over against my neck. 
Even now
 I bring her back to me in her quick shame,
 Hiding her bright face at the point of day;
 Making her grave eyes move in watered stars,
 For love's great sleeplessness wandering all night,
 Seeming to sail gently, as that pink bird,
 Down the water of love in a harvest of lotus. 
Even now
 If I saw her lying all wide eyes
 And with collyrium the indent of her cheek
 Lengthened to the bright ear and her pale side
 So suffering the fever of my distance,
 Then would my love for her be ropes of flowers, and night
 A black-haired lover on the breasts of day. 
Even now
 I see the heavy startled hair of this reed-flute player
 Who curved her poppy lips to love dances,
 Having a youth's face madding like the moon
 Lying at her full; limbs ever moving a little in love,
 Too slight, too delicate, tired with the small burden
 Of bearing love ever on white feet. 
Even now
 She is present to me on her beds,
 Balmed with the exhalation of a flattering musk,
 Rich with the curly essence of santal;
 Girl with eyes dazing as the seeded-wine,
 Showing as a pair of gentle nut-hatches
 Kissing each other with their bills, each hidden
 By turns within a little grasping mouth. 
Even now
 She swims back in the crowning hour of love
 All red with wine her lips have given to drink,
 Soft round the mouth with camphor and faint blue
 Tinted upon the lips, her slight body,
 Her great live eyes, the colourings of herself
 A clear perfection; sighs of musk outstealing
 And powdered wood spice heavy of Cashmir. 
Even now
 I see her; fair face blond like gold
 Rich with small lights, and tinted shadows surprised
 Over and over all of her; with glittering eyes
 All bright for love but very love-weary,
 As it were the conjuring disk of the moon when Rahu ceases
 With his dark stumbling-block to hide her rays. 
Even now
 She is art-magically present to my soul
 And that one word of strange heart's ease, good-bye,
 That in the night, in loth moving to go,
 And bending over to a golden mouth,
 I said softly to the turned away
 Tenderly tired hair of this king's daughter. 
Even now
 My eyes that hurry to see no more are painting, painting
 Faces of my lost girl. O golden rings,
 That tap against cheeks of small magnolia leaves,
 O whitest so soft parchment where
 My poor divorced lips have written excellent
 Stanzas of kisses, and will write no more. 
Even now
 Death sends me the flickering of powdery lids
 Over wild eyes and the pity of her slim body
 All broken up with the weariness of joy;
 The little red flowers of her breasts to be my comfort
 Moving above scarves, and for my sorrow
 Wet crimson lips that once I marked as mine. 
Even now
 By a cool noise of waters in the spring
 The asoka with young flowers that feign her fingers
 And bud in red; and in the green vest pearls kissing
 As it were rose leaves in the gardens of God; the shining at night
 Of white cheeks in the dark; smiles from light thoughts within,
 And her walking as of a swan; these trouble me. 
Even now
 The pleased intimacy of rough love
 Upon the patient glory of her form
 Racks me with memory; and her bright dress
 As it were yellow flame, which the white hand
 Shamefastly gathers in her rising haste,
 The slender grace of her departing feet. 
Even now
 When all my heavy heart is broken up
 I seem to see my prison walls breaking
 And then a light, and in that light a girl
 Her fingers busied about her hair, her cool white arms
 Faint rosy at the elbows, raised in the sunlight,
 And temperate eyes that wander far away. 
Even now
 I seem to see my prison walls come close,
 Built up of darkness, and against that darkness
 A girl no taller than my breast and very tired,
 Leaning upon the bed and smiling, feeding
 A little bird and lying slender as ash-trees,
 Sleepily aware as I told of the green
 Grapes and the small bright-coloured river flowers. 
Even now
 I see her, as I used, in her white palace
 Under black torches throwing cool red light,
 Woven with many flowers and tearing the dark.
 I see her rising, showing all her face
 Defiant timidly, saying clearly;
 Now I shall go to sleep, good-night, my ladies. 
Even now
 Though I am so far separate, a flight of birds
 Swinging from side to side over the valley trees,
 Passing my prison with their calling and crying,
 Bring me to see my girl. For very bird-like
 Is her song singing, and the state of a swan
 In her light walking, like the shaken wings
 Of a black eagle falls her nightly hair. 
Even now
 I know my princess was happy. I see her stand
 Touching her breasts with all her flower-soft fingers,
 Looking askance at me with smiling eyes.
 There is a god that arms him with a flower
 And she was stricken deep. Her, oh die here.
 Kiss me and I shall be purer than quick rivers. 
Even now
 They chatter her weakness through the two bazaars
 Who was so strong to love me. And small men
 That buy and sell for silver being slaves
 Crinkle the fat about their eyes; and yet
 No Prince of the Cities of the Sea has taken her,
 Leading to his grim bed. Little lonely one,
 You clung to me as a garment clings, my girl. 
Even now
 Only one dawn shall rise for me. The stars
 Revolve to-morrow's night and I not heed.
 One brief cold watch beside an empty heart
 And that is all. This night she rests not well;
 Oh, sleep; for there is heaviness for all the world
 Except for the death-lighted heart of me. 
Even now
 My sole concern the slipping of her vests,
 Her little breasts the life beyond this life.
 One night of disarray in her green hems,
 Her golden cloths, outweighs the order of the earth,
 Making of none effect the tides of the sea.
 I have seen her enter the temple meekly and there seem
 The flag of flowers that veils the very god. 
Even now
 I mind the coming and talking of wise men from towers
 Where they had thought away their youth. And I, listening,
 Found not the salt of the whispers of my girl,
 Murmur of confused colours, as we lay near sleep;
 Little wise words and little witty words
 Wanton as water, honeyed with eagerness. 
Even now
 I call to mind her weariness in the morning
 Close lying in my arms, and tiredly smiling
 At my disjointed prayer for her small sake.
 Now in my morning the weariness of death
 Sends me to sleep. Had I made coffins
 I might have lived singing to three score. 
Even now
 The woodcutter and fisherman turn home,
 With on his axe the moon and in his dripping net
 Caught yellow moonlight. The purple flame of fire
 Calls them to love and sleep. From the hot town
 The maker of scant songs for bread wanders
 To lie under the clematis with his girl.
 The moon shines on her breasts, and I must die. 
Even now
 I have a need to make up prayers, to speak
 My last consideration of the world
 To the great thirteen gods, to make my balance
 Ere the soul journeys on. I kneel and say:
 Father of Light. Leave we it burning still
 That I may look at you. Mother of the Stars,
 Give me your feet to kiss; I love you, dear. 
Even now
 I seem to see the face of my lost girl
 With frightened eyes, like a wood wanderer,
 In travail with sorrowful waters, unwept tears
 Labouring to be born and fall; when white face turned
 And little ears caught at the far murmur,
 The pleased snarling of the tumult of dogs
 When I was buried away down the white road. 
Even now
 When slow rose-yellow moons looked out at night
 To guard the sheaves of harvest and mark down
 The peach's fall, how calm she was and love worthy.
 Glass-coloured starlight falling as thin as dew
 Was wont to find us at the spirit's starving time
 Slow straying in the orchard paths with love. 
Even now
 Love is a god and Rati the dark his bride;
 But once I found their child and she was fairer,
 That could so shine. And we were each to each
 Wonderful and a presence not yet felt
 In any dream. I knew the sunset earth
 But as a red gold ring to bear my emerald
 Within the little summer of my youth. 
Even now
 I marvel at the bravery of love,
 She, whose two feet might be held in one hand
 And all her body on a shield of the guards,
 Lashed like a gold panther taken in a pit
 Tearfully valiant, when I too was taken'
 Bearding her black-beard father in his wrath,
 Striking the soldiers with white impotent hands. 
Even now
 I mind that I loved cypress and roses, dear,
 The great blue mountains and the small grey hills,
 The sounding of the sea. Upon a day
 I saw strange eyes and hands like butterflies;
 For me at morning larks flew from the thyme
 And children came to bathe in little streams. 
Even now
 Sleep left me all these nights for your white bed
 And I am sure you sistered lay with sleep
 After much weeping. Piteous little love,
 Death is in the garden, time runs down,
 The year that simple and unexalted ran till now
 Ferments in winy autumn, and I must die. 
Even now
 I mind our going, full of bewilderment
 As who should walk from sleep into great light,
 Along the running of the winter river,
 A dying sun on the cool hurrying tide
 No more by green rushes delayed in dalliance,
 With a clear purpose in his flower-flecked length
 Informed, to reach Nirvana and the sea. 
Even now
 I love long black eyes that caress like silk,
 Ever and ever sad and laughing eyes,
 Whose lids make such sweet shadow when they close
 It seems another beautiful look of hers.
 I love a fresh mouth, ah, a scented mouth,
 And curving hair, subtle as a smoke,
 And light fingers, and laughter of green gems. 
Even now
 I mind asking: Where love and how love Rati's priestesses?
 You can tell me of their washings at moon-down
 And if that warm basin have silver borders.
 Is it so that when they comb their hair
 Their fingers, being purple-stained, show
 Like coral branches in the black sea of their hair? 
Even now
 I remember that you made answer very softly,
 We being one soul, your hand on my hair,
 The burning memory rounding your near lips;
 I have seen the priestesses of Rati make love at moon-fall
 And then in a carpeted hall with a bright gold lamp
 Lie down carelessly anywhere to sleep. 
Even now
 I have no surety that she is not Mahadevi
 Rose red of Siva, or Kapagata
 The wilful ripe Companion of the King,
 Or Krishna's own Lakshmi, the violet-haired.
 I am not certain but that dark Brahma
 In his high secret purposes
 Has sent my soft girl down to make the three worlds mad
 With capering about her scented feet. 
Even now
 Call not the master painters from all the world,
 Their thin black boards, their rose and green and grey,
 Their ashes of lapis ultramarine, Their earth of shadows the umber. Laughing at art
 Sunlight upon the body of my bride,
 For painting not nor any eyes for ever.
 Oh warm tears on the body of my bride. 
Even now
 I mind when the red crowds were passed and it was raining
 How glad those two that shared the rain with me;
 For they talked happily with rich young voices
 And at the storm's increase, closer and with content,
 Each to the body of the other held
 As there were no more severance for ever. 
Even now
 The stainless fair appearance of the moon
 Rolls her gold beauty over an autumn sky
 And the stiff anchorite forgets to pray;
 How much the sooner I, if her wild mouth
 Tasting of the taste of manna came to mine
 And kept my soul at balance above a kiss. 
Even now
 Her mouth careless scented as with lotus dust
 Is water of love to the great heat of love,
 A tirtha very holy, a lover's lake
 Utterly sacred. Might I go down to it
 But one more time, then should I find a way
 To hold my lake for ever and ever more
 Sobbing out my life beside the waters. 
Even now
 I mind that the time of the falling of blossoms started my dream
 Into a wild life, into my girl;
 Then was the essence of her beauty spilled
 Down on my days so that it fades not,
 Fails not, subtle and fresh, in perfuming
 That day, and the days, and this the latest day. 
Even now
 She with young limbs as smooth as flower pollen,
 Whose swaying body is laved in the cool
 Waters of languor, this dear bright-coloured bird,
 Walks not, changes not, advances not
 Her weary station by the black lake
 Of Gone Forever, in whose fountain vase
 Balance the water-lilies of my thought. 
Even now
 Spread we our nets beyond the farthest rims
 So surely that they take the feet of dawn
 Before you wake and after you are sleeping
 Catch up the visible and invisible stars
 And web the ports the strongest dreamer dreamed,
 Yet is it all one, Vidya, yet it is nothing. 
Even now
 The night is full of silver straws of rain,
 And I will send my soul to see your body
 This last poor time. I stand beside our bed;
 Your shadowed head lies leaving a bright space
 Upon the pillow empty, your sorrowful arm
 Holds from your side and clasps not anything.
 There is no covering upon you. 
Even now
 I think your feet seek mine to comfort them.
 There is some dream about you even now
 Which I'll not hear at waking. Weep not at dawn,
 Though day brings wearily your daily loss
 And all the light is hateful. Now is it time
 To bring my soul away. 
Even now
 I mind that I went round with men and women,
 And underneath their brows, deep in their eyes,
 I saw their souls, which go slippng aside
 In swarms before the pleasure of my mind;
 The world was like a flight of birds, shadow or flame
 Which I saw pass above the engraven hills.
 Yet was there never one like to my woman. 
Even now
 Death I take up as consolation.
 Nay, were I free as the condor with his wings
 Or old kings throned on violet ivory,
 Night would not come without beds of green floss
 And never a bed without my bright darling.
  Most fit that you strike now, black guards,
 And let the fountain out before the dawn. 
Even now
 I know that I have savoured the hot taste of life
 Lifting green cups and gold at the great feast.
 Just for a small and a forgotten time
 I have had full in my eyes from off my girl
 The whitest pouring of eternal light.
 The heavy knife. As to a gala day. 
--E. Powys Mathers