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The Fan

LOVELY Semiramis

Closes her slanting eyes:

Dead is she long ago.

From her fan, sliding slow,

Parrot-bright fire's feathers,

Gilded as June weathers,

Plumes bright and shrill as grass

Twinkle down; as they pass

Through the green glooms in Hell

Fruits with a tuneful smell,

Grapes like an emerald rain,

Where the full moon has lain,

Greengages bright as grass,

Melons as cold as glass,

Piled on each gilded booth,

Feel their cheeks growing smooth.

Apes in plumed head-dresses

Whence the bright heat hisses,--

Nubian faces, sly

Pursing mouth, slanting eye,

Feel the Arabian

Winds floating from the fan.

d
Written by
Dame Edith Sitwell
1887-1964 / English
Lines·Words
22·99
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