The most beautiful poem is written on a shroud, As if the stars closed their eyelids at seeing the gods die, But still-gauzy foundlings like cities of dusted sunlight, Bound so long between the pillars of Athens and Rome, Disconsolate remnants in after-golds and winding sheets of stone.
The most beautiful poem speaks only to death, So it may know something of our loss, our bereftness, And like the turnkey of afternoon to evening Under the warm-felt pressure of our reminiscing hands, We too shall pass like long-limbed sunset along the barren grass, Like so many solitary walks bundled up in Autumn mists, And eyes filled with someone once there and absences to come.