By the burnished laurel line
Glimmering flows the singing stream;
Oily eddies crease and shine
O'er white pebbles, white as cream.
Richest roses bud or die
All about the splendid park;
Fountains glass a wily eye
Where the fawns browse in the dark.
Amber-belted through the night
Floats the alabaster moon,
Stooping o'er th' acacia white
Where my mandolin I tune.
By the twinkling mere I sing
Where lake lilies stretch pale eyes,
And a bulbul there doth fling
Music at the moon who flies.
With a broken syrinx there,
From enameled beds of buds,
Rises Pan in hoof and hair -
Moonlight his dim sculpture floods.
The pale jessamines have felt
The large passion of her gaze;
See! they part - their glories melt
Round her in a starry haze.
Serenade
Madison Julius Cawein
(1)
Poem topics: dark, hair, music, night, passion, cream, park, broken, shine, moonlight, gaze, amber, large, glass, stream, moon, white, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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Serenade is a poem by Madison Julius Cawein. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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