WHEN withered leaves are lost in flame Their eddying ghosts, a thin blue haze, Blow through the thickets whence they came On amberlucent autumn days. The cool green woodland heart receives Their dim, dissolving, phantom breath; In young hereditary leaves They see their happy life-in-death. My minutes perish as they glow -- Time burns my crazy bonfire through; But ghosts of blackened hours still blow, Eternal Beauty, back to you! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CORINNA'S GOING A-MAYING by ROBERT HERRICK ON SOMETHING THAT WALKS SOMEWHERE by BEN JONSON HENRY HUDSON'S QUEST [1609] by BURTON EGBERT STEVENSON MARE LIBERUM by HENRY VAN DYKE MY CRYSTAL BRIDE by WILLIAM EDWARD ADAMS CARCASSONNE (SUGGESTED BY LORD DUNSANY'S STORY) by BERTON BRALEY ON THE DEATH OF SMET-SMET, THE HIPPOTAMUS-GODDESS by RUPERT BROOKE |