Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Musagetes. by Madison Julius Cawein
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Musagetes.

    By Madison Julius Cawein



For the mountains' hoarse greetings came hollow
    From stormy wind-chasms and caves,
And I heard their wild cataracts wallow
    Huge bulks in long spasms of waves,
And that Demon said, "Lo! you must follow!
    And our path is o'er myriads of graves."

Then I felt that the black earth was porous
    And rotten with worms and with bones;
And I knew that the ground that now bore us
    Was cadaverous with Death's skeletons;
And I saw horrid eyes, heard sonorous
    And dolorous gnashings and groans.

But the night of the tempest and thunder,
    The might of the terrible skies,
And the fire of Hell that, - coiled under
    The hollow Earth, - smoulders and sighs,
And the laughter of stars and their wonder
    Mingled and mixed in its eyes.

And we clomb - and the moon old and sterile
    Clomb with us o'er torrent and scar!
And I yearned towards her oceans of beryl,
    Wan mountains and cities of spar -
"'Tis not well," that one said, "you're in peril
    Of falling and failing your star."

And we clomb - through a murmur of pinions,
    Thin rattle of talons and plumes;
And a sense as of Boreal dominions
    Clove down to the abysms and tombs;
And the Night's naked, Ethiope minions
    Swarmed on us in legions of glooms.

And we clomb - till we stood at the portal
    Of the uttermost point of the peak,
And it led with a step more than mortal
    Far upward some presence to seek;
And I felt that this love was immortal,
    This love which had made me so weak.

We had clomb till the limbo of spirits
    Of darkness and crime deep below
Swung nebular; nor could we hear its
    Lost wailings and moanings of woe, -
For we stood in a realm that inherits
    A vanquishing virgin of snow.



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