The Ennuye Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABBACDDC EFGEFG| My days are as a garden where the dust | A |
| Of acrid fruits of Sodom sows the ground | B |
| And bows vermillion lillies lofty crowned | B |
| Or fills the myriad mouths of sleepy lust | A |
| The poppies raise And emptied secretly | C |
| Dull ashes from the urns of all the dead | D |
| Have sealed the fountain and the fountain head | D |
| And pall wise draped the pines and myrtle tree | C |
| - | |
| My life an isle in seas of languor lost | E |
| And implicated in airs of clinging grey | F |
| In mists of muffled light and moons undone | G |
| Hears in the doubtful echoes ocean tossed | E |
| Of love and pain in regions far away | F |
| Beneath the unbelievable red sun | G |
Clark Ashton Smith
(1)
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About The Ennuye
The Ennuye 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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