The blood of petals blown adorns the ground; The ravishment of roses has begun; A rivulet of crimson fills a mound; Another grieving forest hides the sun: Possession sated, gone without a sound, The wind with ghosts of bodies must have run; Not even memory can heal the wound, Nor melody give reeds a life undone: The evergreens enfold the shrine; and proud, Bold cypresses themselves embalm their lust; The shadows myrtles bow with hold the shroud, And agony of cedars lay the dust: Gray laurels, now beheaded, once endowed With nodding blue, lament the lonely trust. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CAGED SKYLARK by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS THE FLIGHT OF YOUTH by RICHARD HENRY STODDARD VILLANELLE, WITH STEVENSON'S ASSISTANCE by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS SONNET ON MOOR PARK - WRITTEN AT PARIS, MAY 11, 1826 by SAMUEL EGERTON BRYDGES IN THE PLACE DE LA BASTILLE by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON ON A DAMASK ROSE STICKING UPON A LADY'S BREAST by THOMAS CAREW NATIVITY by PHILIP H. CUMMINGS THE MOTHER'S LAMENT FOR HER INFANT by LUCRETIA MARIA DAVIDSON |