Cydonian Spring with her attendant train, Maelids and water-girls, Stepping beneath a boisterous wind from Thrace, Throughout this sylvan place Spreads the bright tips, And every vine-stock is Clad in new brilliancies. And wild desire Falls like black lightning. O bewildered heart, Though every branch have back what last year lost, She, who moved here amid the cyclamen, Moves only now a clinging tenuous ghost. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STREET-CRIES: 2. THE SHIP OF EARTH by SIDNEY LANIER TO A STEAM ROLLER by MARIANNE MOORE ON A MINIATURE by HENRY AUGUSTIN BEERS MAD BLAKE by WILLIAM ROSE BENET PSALM 19. COELI ENARRANT by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE MAXIMS FOR THE OLD HOUSE: THE DUST by ANNA HEMPSTEAD BRANCH THE SECOND BAPTISM by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON MEDITATIONS FOR EVERY DAY IN PASSION WEEK: WEDNESDAY by JOHN BYROM |