
From Spring Days to Winter
A shimmering meditation on time's relentless passage, Oscar Wilde's poem traces the cycle of the seasons as a mirror for human experience. Moving from the tender promise of spring blossoms through the golden abundance of summer and the melancholic fade of autumn into winter's stark silence, the verse carries both beauty and sorrow in equal measure. Wilde's characteristic musicality illuminates each stanza, his language at once delicate and devastating. The poem hums with the particular Wildean melancholy that would later define his greatest work: the knowledge that all beauty fades, that spring must yield to snow, that youth cannot be held. Yet within this impermanence lies a strange grace. For readers who have tasted Wilde's plays and prose, this poem reveals another dimension of his genius: not the satirist's wit, but the poet's tender, unflinching gaze at what it means to move through time.
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