Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Music And Moonlight by Madison Julius Cawein
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Music And Moonlight

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    White roses, like a mist
    Upon a terraced height,
    And 'mid the roses, opal, moonbeam-kissed,
    A fountain falling white.

    And as the full moon flows,
    Orbed fire, into a cloud,
    There is a fragrant sound as if a rose
    Had sighed its soul aloud.

    There is a whisper pale,
    As if a rose awoke,
    And, having heard in sleep the nightingale,
    Still dreaming of it spoke.

    Now, as from some vast shell
    A giant pearl rolls white,
    From the dividing cloud, that winds compel,
    The moon sweeps, big and bright.

    Moon-mists and pale perfumes,
    Wind-wafted through the dusk:
    There is a sound as if unfolding blooms
    Voiced their sweet thoughts in musk.

    A spirit is abroad
    Of music and of sleep:
    The moon and mists have made for it a road
    Adown the violet deep.

    It breathes a tale to me,
    A tale of ancient day;
    And like a dream again I seem to see
    Those towers old and gray.

    That castle by the foam,
    Where once our hearts made moan:
    And through the night again you seem to come
    Down statued stairs of stone.

    Again I feel your hair,
    Dark, fragrant, deep and cool:
    You lift your face up, pale with its despair,
    And wildly beautiful.

    Again your form I strain;
    Again, unto my heart:
    Again your lips, again and yet again,
    I press and then we part.

    As centuries ago
    We did in Camelot;
    Where once we lived that life of bliss and woe,
    That you remember not.

    When you were Guinevere,
    And I was Launcelot. .
    I have remembered many and many a year,
    And you you have forgot.



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