Treachery

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I.

  Came a spicy smell of showers
  On the purple wings of night,
  And a pearl-encrusted crescent
  On the lake looked still and white,
  While a sound of distant singing
  From the vales rose sad and light.


  II.

  Dripped the musk of sodden roses
  From their million heavy sprays,
  And the nightingales were sobbing
  Of the roses amorous praise
  Where the raven down of even
  Caught the moonlight's bleaching rays.


  III.

  And the turrets of the palace,
  From its belt of ancient trees,
  On the mountain rose romantic
  White as foam from troubled seas;
  And the murmur of an ocean
  Smote the chords of ev'ry breeze.


  IV.

  Where the moon shone on the terrace
  And its fountain's lisping foam;
  Where the bronzen urns of flowers
  Breathed faint perfume thro' the gloam,
  By the alabaster Venus
  'Neath the quiet stars we'd roam.


  V.

  And we stopped beside the statue
  Of the marble Venus there
  Deeply pedestaled 'mid roses,
  Who their crimson hearts laid bare,
  Breathing out their lives in fragrance
  At her naked feet and fair.


  VI.

  And we marked the purple dingles
  Where the lazy vapors lolled,
  Like thin, fleecy ribs of moonlight
  Touched with amethyst and gold;
  And we marked the wild deer glimmer
  Like dim specters where they strolled....


  VII.

  But from out those treach'rous roses
  Crept a serpent and it stung,
  Poisoned him who'd tuned my heart-strings
  Till for him alone they sung,
  Froze the nerves of hands that only
  From its chords a note had wrung.


  VIII.

  Now the nightingales in anguish
  To cold, ashen roses moan;
  Now a sound of desolate wailing
  In the darkened palace lone
  From a harp Æolian quavers
  Broken on an empty throne.

© Madison Julius Cawein