I HAVE been where the white lilies blow That no heart ponders; I have been where the rose-thickets grow, And love never wanders; Where the laurel-branch unbroken Forgets the songful strife; I have found this Death-in-life; 'Tis in Wild Eden! There over the low lilied lawns, Down rose-leaf alleys, She moves under silent dawns Through songless valleys; Cold rose and snow-cold lilies Shall for the maid be strewn, Nor laurel for her moan; 'Tis in Wild Eden! I have sent my songs up to her Sweetly youth left me; I have given my manhood to woo her, And of all bereft me; And nightly I wake from the garden That lieth remote, apart, On the bourn of the hopeless heart; 'Tis in Wild Eden. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EIGHTEEN-DOLLAR TAXI TRIP TO TIZAPAN AND BACK TO CHAPALA by CLARENCE MAJOR DOWNFALL OF POLAND [FALL OF WARSAW, 1794] by THOMAS CAMPBELL THE WAVING OF THE CORN by SIDNEY LANIER INDIAN NAMES by LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY THE PALACE OF ART by ALFRED TENNYSON THE QUAKER POET; VERSES ON SEEING MYSELF SO DESIGNATED by BERNARD BARTON THREE by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON |