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Lord Alfred Douglas - The Garden Of DeathLord Alfred Douglas - The Garden Of Death
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There is an isle in an unfurrowed sea That I wot of, whereon the whole year round The apple-blossoms and the rosebuds be In early blooming ; and a many sound Of ten-stringed lute, and most mellifluous breath Of silver flute, and mellow half-heard horn, Making unmeasured music. Thither Death Coming like Love, takes all things in the morn Of tenderest life, and being a delicate god, In his own garden takes each delicate thing Unstained, unmellowed, immature, untrod, Tremulous betwixt the summer and the spring : The rosebud ere it come to be a rose, The blossom ere it win to be a fruit, The virginal snowdrop, and the dove that knows Only one dove for lover ; all the loot Of young soft things, and all the harvesting Of unripe flowers. Never comes the moon To matron fulness, here no child-bearing Vexes desire, and the sun knows no noon. But all the happy dwellers of that place Are reckless children gotten on Delight By Beauty that is thrall to Death ; no grace, No natural sweet they lack, a chrysolite Of perfect beauty each. No wisdom comes To mar their early folly, no false laws Man-made for man, no mouthing prudence numbs Their green unthought, or gives their licence pause ; Young animals, young flowers, they live and grow, And die before their sweet emblossomed breath Has learnt to sigh save like a lover`s. Oh ! How sweet is Youth, how delicate is Death !
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