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- ALL SOULS' NIGHT
- i{Epilogue to "A Vision'}
-
- MIDNIGHT has come, and the great Christ Church Bell
- And may a lesser bell sound through the room;
- And it is All Souls' Night,
- And two long glasses brimmed with muscatel
- Bubble upon the table. A ghost may come;
- For it is a ghost's right,
- His element is so fine
- Being sharpened by his death,
- To drink from the wine-breath
- While our gross palates drink from the whole wine.
- I need some mind that, if the cannon sound
- From every quarter of the world, can stay
- Wound in mind's pondering
- As mummies in the mummy-cloth are wound;
- Because I have a marvellous thing to say,
- A certain marvellous thing
- None but the living mock,
- Though not for sober ear;
- It may be all that hear
- Should laugh and weep an hour upon the clock.
- Horton's the first I call. He loved strange thought
- And knew that sweet extremity of pride
- That's called platonic love,
- And that to such a pitch of passion wrought
- Nothing could bring him, when his lady died,
- Anodyne for his love.
- Words were but wasted breath;
- One dear hope had he:
- The inclemency
- Of that or the next winter would be death.
- Two thoughts were so mixed up I could not tell
- Whether of her or God he thought the most,
- But think that his mind's eye,
- When upward turned, on one sole image fell;
- And that a slight companionable ghost,
- Wild with divinity,
- Had so lit up the whole
- Immense miraculous house
- The Bible promised us,
- It seemed a gold-fish swimming in a bowl.
- On Florence Emery I call the next,
- Who finding the first wrinkles on a face
- Admired and beautiful,
- And knowing that the future would be vexed
- With 'minished beauty, multiplied commonplace,
- preferred to teach a school
- Away from neighbour or friend,
- Among dark skins, and there
- permit foul years to wear
- Hidden from eyesight to the unnoticed end.
- Before that end much had she ravelled out
- From a discourse in figurative speech
- By some learned Indian
- On the soul's journey. How it is whirled about,
- Wherever the orbit of the moon can reach,
- Until it plunge into the sun;
- And there, free and yet fast,
- Being both Chance and Choice,
- Forget its broken toys
- And sink into its own delight at last.
- And I call up MacGregor from the grave,
- For in my first hard springtime we were friends.
- Although of late estranged.
- I thought him half a lunatic, half knave,
- And told him so, but friendship never ends;
- And what if mind seem changed,
- And it seem changed with the mind,
- When thoughts rise up unbid
- On generous things that he did
- And I grow half contented to be blind!
- He had much industry at setting out,
- Much boisterous courage, before loneliness
- Had driven him crazed;
- For meditations upon unknown thought
- Make human intercourse grow less and less;
- They are neither paid nor praised.
- but he d object to the host,
- The glass because my glass;
- A ghost-lover he was
- And may have grown more arrogant being a ghost.
- But names are nothing. What matter who it be,
- So that his elements have grown so fine
- The fume of muscatel
- Can give his sharpened palate ecstasy
- No living man can drink from the whole wine.
- I have mummy truths to tell
- Whereat the living mock,
- Though not for sober ear,
- For maybe all that hear
- Should laugh and weep an hour upon the clock.
- Such thought -- such thought have I that hold it tight
- Till meditation master all its parts,
- Nothing can stay my glance
- Until that glance run in the world's despite
- To where the damned have howled away their hearts,
- And where the blessed dance;
- Such thought, that in it bound
- I need no other thing,
- Wound in mind's wandering
- As mummies in the mummy-cloth are wound.
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