Even the beauty of the rose doth cast, When its bright, fervid noon is past, A still and lengthening shadow in the dust Till darkness come And take its strange dream home. The transient bubbles of the water paint 'Neath their frail arch a shadow faint; The golden nimbus of the windowed saint, Till shine the stars, Casts pale and trembling bars. The loveliest thing earth hath, a shadow hath, A dark and livelong hint of death, Haunting it ever till its last faint breath. . . Who, then, may tell The beauty of heaven's shadowless asphodel? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OLD LEM by STERLING ALLEN BROWN SONG OF THE RABBITS OUTSIDE THE TAVERN by ELIZABETH JANE COATSWORTH ANNIVERSARIUM BAPTISMI (1) by JOSEPH BEAUMONT JOHANNES MILTON, SENEX by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES EPITAPH FOR JOSEPH BLACKETT, LATE POET AND SHOEMAKER by GEORGE GORDON BYRON DOVECOTT MILL: 7. YOUTH AND MAIDEN by PHOEBE CARY THE CANTERBURY TALES: THE MILLER'S PROLOGUE by GEOFFREY CHAUCER |