At Glan-Y-Wern, by Arthur Symons

At Glan-Y-Wern

White-robed against the threefold white
Of shutter, glass, and curtain's lace,
She flashed into the evening light
The brilliance of her gipsy face:
I saw the evening in her light.   Clear, from the soft hair to the mouth,
Her ardent face made manifest
The sultry beauty of the South:
Below, a red rose, climbing, pressed
Against the roses of her mouth.   So, in the window's threefold white,
O'ertrailed with foliage like a bower,
She seemed, against the evening light,
Among the flowers herself a flower,
A tiger-lily sheathed in white.

poems.one - Arthur Symons