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

    By James Whitcomb Riley



    A fantasy that came to me
        As wild and wantonly designed
    As ever any dream might be
        Unraveled from a madman's mind, -
    A tangle-work of tissue, wrought
        By cunning of the spider-brain,
        And woven, in an hour of pain,
    To trap the giddy flies of thought.

    I stood beneath a summer moon
        All swollen to uncanny girth,
    And hanging, like the sun at noon,
        Above the center of the earth;
        But with a sad and sallow light,
        As it had sickened of the night
    And fallen in a pallid swoon.
    Around me I could hear the rush
        Of sullen winds, and feel the whir
    Of unseen wings apast me brush
        Like phantoms round a sepulcher;
    And, like a carpeting of plush,0
        A lawn unrolled beneath my feet,
        Bespangled o'er with flowers as sweet
        To look upon as those that nod
        Within the garden-fields of God,
        But odorless as those that blow
        In ashes in the shades below.

    And on my hearing fell a storm
        Of gusty music, sadder yet
        Than every whimper of regret
    That sobbing utterance could form,
        And patched with scraps of sound that seemed
        Torn out of tunes that demons dreamed,
        And pitched to such a piercing key,
        It stabbed the ear with agony;
        And when at last it lulled and died,
        I stood aghast and terrified.
    I shuddered and I shut my eyes,
        And still could see, and feel aware
        Some mystic presence waited there;
    And staring, with a dazed surprise,
        I saw a creature so divine
        That never subtle thought of mine
        May reproduce to inner sight
        So fair a vision of delight.

    A syllable of dew that drips
    From out a lily's laughing lips
    Could not be sweeter than the word
    I listened to, yet never heard. -
    For, oh, the woman hiding there
    Within the shadows of her hair,
    Spake to me in an undertone
    So delicate, my soul alone
    But understood it as a moan
    Of some weak melody of wind
    A heavenward breeze had left behind.

    A tracery of trees, grotesque
        Against the sky, behind her seen,
    Like shapeless shapes of arabesque
        Wrought in an Oriental screen;
    And tall, austere and statuesque
        She loomed before it - e'en as though
        The spirit-hand of Angelo
        Had chiseled her to life complete,
        With chips of moonshine round her feet.
    And I grew jealous of the dusk,
        To see it softly touch her face,
        As lover-like, with fond embrace,
    It folded round her like a husk:
    But when the glitter of her hand,
        Like wasted glory, beckoned me,
        My eyes grew blurred and dull and dim -
        My vision failed - I could not see -
    I could not stir - I could but stand,
        Till, quivering in every limb,
        I flung me prone, as though to swim
        The tide of grass whose waves of green
        Went rolling ocean-wide between
        My helpless shipwrecked heart and her
        Who claimed me for a worshiper.

    And writhing thus in my despair,
        I heard a weird, unearthly sound,
        That seemed to lift me from the ground
    And hold me floating in the air.
    I looked, and lo!    I saw her bow
        Above a harp within her hands;
    A crown of blossoms bound her brow,
        And on her harp were twisted strands
    Of silken starlight, rippling o'er
    With music never heard before
    By mortal ears; and, at the strain,
    I felt my Spirit snap its chain
    And break away, - and I could see
    It as it turned and fled from me
    To greet its mistress, where she smiled
    To see the phantom dancing wild
    And wizard-like before the spell
    Her mystic fingers knew so well.



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