Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Vision by Edgar Lee Masters
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The Vision

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        Of that dear vale where you and I have lain
        Scanning the mysteries of life and death
        I dreamed, though how impassable the space
        Of time between the present and the past!
        This was the vision that possessed my mind;
        I thought the weird and gusty days of March
        Had eased themselves in melody and peace.
        Pale lights, swift shadows, lucent stalks, clear streams,
        Cool, rosy eves behind the penciled mesh
        Of hazel thickets, and the huge feathered boughs
        Of walnut trees stretched singing to the blast;
        And the first pleasantries of sheep and kine;
        The cautioned twitterings of hidden birds;
        The flight of geese among the scattered clouds;
        Night's weeping stars and all the pageantries
        Of awakened life had blossomed into May,
        Whilst she with trailing violets in her hair
        Blew music from the stops of watery stems,
        And swept the grasses with her viewless robes,
        Which dreaming men thought voices, dreaming still.
        Now as I lay in vision by the stream
        That flows amidst our well beloved vale,
        I looked throughout the vista stretched between
        Two ranging hills; one meadowed rich in grass;
        The other wooded, thick and quite obscure
        With overgrowth, rank in the luxury
        Of all wild places, but ever growing sparse
        Of trees or saplings on the sudden slope
        That met the grassy level of the vale; -
        But still within the shadow of those woods,
        Which sprinkled all beneath with fragrant dew,
        There grew all flowers, which tempted little paths
        Between them, up and on into the wood.
        Here, as the sun had left his midday peak
        The incommunicable blue of heaven blent
        With his fierce splendor, filling all the air
        With softened glory, while the pasturage
        Trembled with color of the poppy blooms
        Shook by the steps of the swift-sandaled wind.
        Nor any sound beside disturbed the dream
        Of Silence slumbering on the drowsy flowers.
        Then as I looked upon the widest space
        Of open meadow where the sunlight fell
        In veils of tempered radiance, I saw
        The form of one who had escaped the care
        And equal dullness of our common day.
        For like a bright mist rising from the earth
        He made appearance, growing more distinct
        Until I saw the stole, likewise the lyre
        Grasped by the fingers of the modeled hand.
        Yea, I did see the glory of his hair
        Against the deep green bay-leaves filleting
        The ungathered locks. And so throughout the vale
        His figure stood distinct and his own shade
        Was the sole shadow. Deeming this approach
        Augur of good, as if in hidden ways
        Of loveliness the gods do still appear
        The counselors of men, and even where
        Wonder and meditation wooed us oft,
        I cried, "Apollo" - and his form dissolved,
        As if the nymphs of echo, who took up
        The voice and bore it to the hollow wood,
        By that same flight had startled the great god
        To vanishment. And thereupon I woke
        And disarrayed the figment of my thought.
        For of the very air, magic with hues,
        Blent with the distant objects, I had formed
        The splendid apparition, and so knew
        It was, alas! a dream within a dream!



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