Oscar Wilde

Le Panneau

Le Panneau - meaning Summary

Miniature Romantic Tableau

Wilde's "Le Panneau" depicts a small, decorative scene of an ivory-skinned girl beneath a rose tree, tending blossoms and singing with a lover watching. The poem foregrounds delicate, ornamental imagery—petals, a lute, a silver crane—mixing playful eroticism and gentle violence (a thorn's prick). Its circular wording returns to the opening image, suggesting the scene is a crafted, suspended tableau rather than narrative progression.

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Under the rose-tree's dancing shade There stands a little ivory girl, Pulling the leaves of pink and pearl With pale green nails of polished jade. The red leaves fall upon the mould, The white leaves flutter, one by one, Down to a blue bowl where the sun, Like a great dragon, writhes in gold. The white leaves float upon the air, The red leaves flutter idly down, Some fall upon her yellow gown, And some upon her raven hair. She takes an amber lute and sings, And as she sings a silver crane Begins his scarlet neck to strain, And flap his burnished metal wings. She takes a lute of amber bright, And from the thicket where he lies Her lover, with his almond eyes, Watches her movements in delight. And now she gives a cry of fear, And tiny tears begin to start: A thorn has wounded with its dart The pink-veined sea-shell of her ear. And now she laughs a merry note: There has fallen a petal of the rose Just where the yellow satin shows The blue-veined flower of her throat. With pale green nails of polished jade, Pulling the leaves of pink and pearl, There stands a little ivory girl Under the rose-tree's dancing shade.

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