Georgian Poetry 1916-17 - Edited by Sir Edward Howard Marsh by Various
page 12 of 142 (08%)
page 12 of 142 (08%)
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I love the mossy quietness
That grows upon the great stone flags, The dark tree-ferns, the staghorn ferns, The prehistoric, antlered stags That carven stand and stare among The silent, ferny wilderness. And are they birds or souls that flit Among the trees so silently, And are they fish or ghosts that haunt The still pools of the rockery!-- For I am but a sculptured rock As in that magic place I sit. Still as a great jewel is the air With boughs and leaves smooth-carved in it, And rocks and trees and giant ferns, And blooms with inner radiance lit, And naked water like a nymph That dances tireless slim and bare. I watch a white Nyanza float Upon a green, untroubled pool, A fairyland Ophelia, she Has cast herself in water cool, And lies while fairy cymbals ring Drowned in her fairy castle moat. The goldfish sing a winding song Below her pale and waxen face, |
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