by Amy Lowell
The garden is steeped in moonlight,
Full to its high edges with brimming silver,
And the fish-ponds brim and darken
And run in little serpent lights soon extinguished.
Lily-pads lie upon the surface, beautiful as the
tarnishings on frail old silver,
And the Harvest moon droops heavily out of the
sky,
A ripe, white melon, intensely, magnificently,
shining.
Your window is orange in the moonlight,
It glows like a lamp behind the branches of the
old wistaria,
It burns like a lamp before a shrine,
The small, intimate, familiar shrine
Placed reverently among the bricks
Of a much-loved garden wall.
From:
Pulitzer Prize Poems
Copyright ©:
1941, Random House, NY





