Moonlight
What time the meanest brick and
Take on a beauty not their own,
And past the flaw of builded
Shines the intention whole and good,
And all the little homes of
Rise to a dimmer, nobler span;
When colour's absence gives
To the deeper spirit of the shape,— Then earth's great architecture
Among her mountains and her
Under the moon to
Massive and primitive and rude:— Then do the clouds like silver
Stream out above the tattered crags,
And black and silver all the
Marshalls its hunched and rocky host,
And headlands striding
Buttress the land against the sea,— The darkened land, the brightening wave —And moonlight slants through Merlin's cave.
Victoria Sackville West
Other author posts
A Saxon Song
Tools with the comely names, Mattock and scythe and spade, Couth and bitter as flames, Clean, and bowed in the blade,--A man and his tools make a man and his trade Breadth of the English shires, Hummock and kame and mead, Tang of the reeking ...
Trio
So well she knew them both yet as she Into the room, and heard their Of tragic meshes knotted with her name,
Tuscany
Cisterns and stones; the fig-tree in the Casts down her shadow, ashen as her boughs, Across the road, across the thick white dust Down from the hill the slow white oxen crawl,
Full Moon
She was wearing the coral taffeta Someone had brought her from Ispahan, And the little gold coat with pomegranate blossoms, And the coral-hafted feather fan;