Autumn Orchards by Clark Ashton Smith Walled with far azures of the wintering year, Late autumn on a windless altar burns; Splendid as rubies from Sabean urns, A holocaust of hues is gathered here. The pear-trees lift a Tyrian tinged with blood; Strange purples brighten in the smouldering plums; The fire-red gold of peach and cherry comes To storm the bronzing borders of the wood. Rich as the pyre of some Hesperian queen, Feeding the ultimate sunset with sad fires, Is this, where beauty with her doom conspires To tell in flame what death and beauty mean. O, loveliness grown tragical and dear! My heart has taken from the torchful leaf A swiftly soaring glory, and the grief Of love is colored like the dying year.