Full-ripened on the bough,
Pends the bright apple now,
And the lees fall from out the unclouded wine.
These memories that return
Pour from their mellowing urn
A dreamful and delicious anodyne.
O love! thy face, thy hands,
Long lost in sadder lands,
Somewhere amid this golden dale remain:
All that was flown and dear
Lies somehow warm and near-
Nothing is gone but loneliness and pain.
All day I follow still,
On western wold or hill,
The dream redreamed, the enchantment wrought once more:
Tomorrow brings at last
All blisses of the past
For him that drinks of autumn's mandragore.
No bitter winds awake
In reedy tarn or brake;
The citron sunset leaves an orange moon.
Before my senses float
Thy breasts, thy lips, thy throat
Like fruit of Hesperus in a poppy-swoon.
Anodyne Of Autumn
Clark Ashton Smith
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Poem topics: autumn, dream, lost, moon, pain, sunset, dear, fruit, long, delicious, bright, face, apple, return, remain, bitter, warm, tomorrow, orange, golden, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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Anodyne Of Autumn is a poem by Clark Ashton Smith. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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