FAR, far away, I know not where, I know not how, The skies are gray, the boughs are bare, bare boughs in flower; Long lilac silk is softly drawn from bough to bough, With flowers of milk and buds of fawn, a broidered shower. Beneath that tent an Empress sits, with slanted eyes, And wafts of scent from censers flit, a lilac flood; Around her throne bloom peach and plum in lacquered dyes, And many a blown chrysanthemum, and many a bud. She sits and dreams, while bonzes twain strike some rich bell, Whose music seems a metal rain of radiant dye; In this strange birth of various blooms, I cannot tell Which sprang from earth, which slipped from looms, which sank from sky. Beneath her wings of lilac dim, in robes of blue, The Empress sings a wordless hymn that thrills her bower; My trance unweaves, and winds, and shreds, and weaves anew Dark bronze, bright leaves, pure silken threads, in triple flower. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 34. THE DARK GLASS by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 40. AL-MUKIT by EDWIN ARNOLD PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 7. AL-MAUMIN by EDWIN ARNOLD UNKNOWN QUANTITY by LEONARD BACON (1887-1954) THE TRIUMPHS OF THY CONQUERING POWER by WILLIAM HILEY BATHURST |