I the deep violet air, 
Not a leaf is stirred;  
There is no sound heard,  
But afar, the rare 
Trilled voice of a bird. 
 
Is the wood's dim heart, 
And the fragrant pine,  
Incense, and a shrine  
Of her coming. Apart, 
I wait for a sign. 
 
What the sudden hush said, 
She will hear, and forsake,  
Swift, for my sake,  
Her green, grassy bed: 
She will hear and awake! 
 
She will hearken and glide, 
From her place of deep rest,  
Dove-eyed, with the breast  
Of a dove, to my side: 
The pines bow their crest. 
 
I wait for a sign: 
The leaves to be waved,  
The tall tree-tops laved  
In a flood of sunshine, 
This world to be saved! 
 
In the deep violet air, 
Not a leaf is stirred;  
There is no sound heard,  
But afar, the rare 
Trilled voice of a bird.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/chanson-sans-paroles/