The fallen leaves are the shrouds of hoof prints,
The withers of breeze reined to time-kept trysts,
Gentilissimo, Cavalieri di Corredo, Italian knight
Whose path by pure loverβs look is made clean.
We go back, we go back to the sun caught by handfuls,
Like the Medieval snow melts into Grecian stream.
Gentle knight, to your galloping song of Winter:
The sweeping rush of grass and gathering refrain
Of bells surrounds the long sloping meadow of
The muzzle, snorting freedoms of wildflowers past,
Leaving its bosky thunderbrush of tail like distant
Summer storms and the slackening rhythms of rain.
We go back, we go back to the sun caught by handfuls,
Like the Medieval snow melts into Grecian stream.
The volplaning bird plucks from fish-eyed shallows,
A gargoyle perches on an ***** key, ever sustaining,
A woman plays the lute from manβs hollowed rib,
As the priests with sophistry sweep the dust off sin.
We go back, we go back to the sun caught by handfuls,
Like the Medieval snow melts into Grecian stream.
But the clock cannot turn its face from its tears.
Cavalieri di Corredo, or Cavalieri Addobbati, were the elite of Italian Medieval knights on horseback.
Here is a post-Medieval portrait (Moroni, 1520-1579) to give you some idea:
https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/giovanni-battista-moroni-portrait-of-a-gentleman-il-gentile-cavaliere
Bosky is bushy.
Volplaning is the downward dive of a bird.