Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Dream by James Whitcomb Riley
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A Dream

    By James Whitcomb Riley



    I dreamed I was a spider;
    A big, fat, hungry spider;
    A lusty, rusty spider
        With a dozen palsied limbs;
    With a dozen limbs that dangled
    Where three wretched flies were tangled
    And their buzzing wings were strangled
        In the middle of their hymns.

    And I mocked them like a demon -
    A demoniacal demon
    Who delights to be a demon
        For the sake of sin alone;
    And with fondly false embraces
    Did I weave my mystic laces
    Round their horror-stricken faces
        Till I muffled every groan.

    And I smiled to see them weeping,
    For to see an insect weeping,
    Sadly, sorrowfully weeping,
        Fattens every spider's mirth;
    And to note a fly's heart quaking,
    And with anguish ever aching
    Till you see it slowly breaking
        Is the sweetest thing on earth.

    I experienced a pleasure,
    Such a highly-flavored pleasure,
    Such intoxicating pleasure,
        That I drank of it like wine;
    And my mortal soul engages
    That no spider on the pages
    Of the history of ages
        Felt a rapture more divine.

    I careened around and capered -
    Madly, mystically capered -
    For three days and nights I capered
        Round my web in wild delight;
    Till with fierce ambition burning,
    And an inward thirst and yearning
    I hastened my returning
        With a fiendish appetite.

    And I found my victims dying,
    "Ha!" they whispered, "we are dying!"
    Faintly whispered, "we are dying,
        And our earthly course is run."
    And the scene was so impressing
    That I breathed a special blessing,
    As I killed them with caressing
        And devoured them one by one.



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