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Constantinople - Dhji-Han-Ghir. For H.N.

Topics: classic

For years it had been neglected,         This wilderness garden of ours,         And its ruin had shone reflected         In its pools through abandoned hours.         For none had cared for its beauty         Till we came, the strangers, the Giaours,         And none had thought of a duty         Towards its squandering flowers.         Of broken wells and fountains         There were half a dozen or more,         And, beyond the sea, the mountains         Of that far Bithynian shore         Were blue in the purple distance         And white was the cap they wore,         And never in our existence         Had life seemed brighter before!         And the fruit-trees grew in profusion,         Quince and pomegranate and wine,         And the roses in rich confusion         With the lilac intertwine,         And the Banksia rose, the creeper,         Which is golden like yellow wine,         Is surely more gorgeous and deeper         In this garden of mine and thine.         And the little bright flowers in the grasses,         Cyclamen, daffodil,         Are crushed by the foot that passes,         But seem to grow thicker still;         In the cool grey fig-tree's shadows         They grow at their own free will,         In the grass as in English meadows,         On the slope of an English hill.         Is it best, when the lone flute-player         Wanders by with his strange little tune         And the muezzin sings out for prayer         Thrice daily his Arabic rune:         Once, when the sunset has faded,         Once in the brilliant noon,         Or once in the daybreak, rose-shaded.         A farewell to the dying moon?

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"For years it had been neglected,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Victoria Mary Sackville-West delivers a powerful performance in "Constantinople - Dhji-Han-Ghir. For H.N."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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