Ah, woe is me, for Love hath lain asleep,
Hath lain too long in some Circean close-
Till on his dreaming wings the ruined rose
Fell lightly, and the rose-red leaves were deep.
Ah, wellaway, for love is overlate:
Far-wandering, alone, we know not where,
He found the white and purple poppies fair,
Nor heard the summer pass importunate.
Sweet Love, can we forgive thy loitering ?
The golden summer, like a dream at dawn,
Changes, and from our kindled eyes is gone,
And leaves grey autumn. . . . We have heard thy wing
But with a sound of sighing; heart on heart,
In our own sighs we hear thy wing depart.
Belated Love
Clark Ashton Smith
(1)
Poem topics: alone, autumn, dream, purple, red, sweet, white, deep, long, hear, forgive, golden, sound, dawn, depart, heart, rose, summer, wing, love, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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