Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Moondial by Bliss Carman (William)
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The Moondial

    By Bliss Carman (William)



    Iron and granite and rust,
    In a crumbling garden old,
    Where the roses are paler than dust
    And the lilies are green with gold,

    Under the racing moon,
    Inconscious of war or crime,
    In a strange and ghostly noon,
    It marks the oblivion of time.

    The shadow steals through its arc,
    Still as a frosted breath,
    Fitful, gleaming, and dark
    As the cold frustration of death.

    But where the shadow may fall,
    Whether to hurry or stay,
    It matters little at all
    To those who come that way.

    For this is the dial of them
    That have forgotten the world,
    No more through the mad day-dream
    Of striving and reason hurled.

    Their heart as a little child
    Only remembers the worth
    Of beauty and love and the wild
    Dark peace of the elder earth.

    It registers the morrows
    Of lovers and winds and streams,
    And the face of a thousand sorrows
    At the postern gate of dreams.

    When the first low laughter smote
    Through Lilith, the mother of joy,
    And died and revived from the throat
    Of Helen, the harpstring of Troy,

    And wandering on through the years,
    From the sobbing rain and the sea,
    Caught sound of the world's gray tears
    Or sense of the sun's gold glee,

    Whenever the wild control
    Burned out to a mortal kiss,
    And the shuddering storm-swept soul
    Climbed to its acme of bliss,

    The green-gold light of the dead
    Stood still in purple space,
    And a record blind and dread
    Was graved on the dial's face.

    And once in a thousand years
    Some youth who loved so well
    The gods had loosed him from fears
    In a vision of blameless hell,

    Has gone to the dial to read
    Those signs in the outland tongue,
    Written beyond the need
    Of the simple and the young.

    For immortal life, they say,
    Were his who, loving so,
    Could explain the writing away
    As a legend written in snow.

    But always his innocent eyes
    Were frozen into the stone.
    From that awful first surprise
    His soul must return alone.

    In the morning there he lay
    Dead in the sun's warm gold.
    And no man knows to this day
    What the dim moondial told.



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