Under The Rose

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    He told a story to her,
    A story old yet new
    And was it of the Faëry Folk
    That dance along the dew?

    The night was hung with silence
    As a room is hung with cloth,
    And soundless, through the rose-sweet hush,
    Swooned dim the down-white moth.

    Along the east a shimmer,
    A tenuous breath of flame,
    From which, as from a bath of light,
    Nymph-like, the girl-moon came.

    And pendent in the purple
    Of heaven, like fireflies,
    Bubbles of gold the great stars blew
    From windows of the skies.

    He told a story to her,
    A story full of dreams
    And was it of the Elfin things
    That haunt the thin moonbeams?

    Upon the hill a thorn-tree,
    Crooked and gnarled and gray,
    Against the moon seemed some crutch'd hag
    Dragging a child away.

    And in the vale a runnel,
    That dripped from shelf to shelf,
    Seemed, in the night, a woodland witch
    Who muttered to herself.

    Along the land a zephyr,
    Whose breath was wild perfume,
    That seemed a sorceress who wove
    Sweet spells of beam and bloom.

    He told a story to her,
    A story young yet old
    And was it of the mystic things
    Men's eyes shall ne'er behold?

    They heard the dew drip faintly
    From out the green-cupped leaf;
    They heard the petals of the rose
    Unfolding from their sheaf.

    They saw the wind light-footing
    The waters into sheen;
    They saw the starlight kiss to sleep
    The blossoms on the green.

    They heard and saw these wonders;
    These things they saw and heard;
    And other things within the heart
    For which there is no word.

    He told a story to her,
    The story men call Love,
    Whose echoes fill the ages past,
    And the world ne'er tires of.



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