Phantasmagoria and Other Poems by Lewis Carroll
page 52 of 89 (58%)
page 52 of 89 (58%)
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Or sunlit hues on cloistered pane,
His colour came and went again. Pitying his obvious distress, Yet with a tinge of bitterness, She said "The More exceeds the Less." "A truth of such undoubted weight," He urged, "and so extreme in date, It were superfluous to state." Roused into sudden passion, she In tone of cold malignity: "To others, yea: but not to thee." But when she saw him quail and quake, And when he urged "For pity's sake!" Once more in gentle tones she spake. "Thought in the mind doth still abide That is by Intellect supplied, And within that Idea doth hide: "And he, that yearns the truth to know, Still further inwardly may go, And find Idea from Notion flow: "And thus the chain, that sages sought, Is to a glorious circle wrought, For Notion hath its source in Thought." |
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