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THE
MANY-MANSIONED HOUSE
AND OTHER POEMS
By
EDWARD WILLIAM THOMSON
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ENVIRONMENT
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OUR prison house extends so wide
It walls the farthest Oceans’ tide,
Enarches every Tropics bloom,
And gives the opposing Arctics room.
Its
vistas do all stars include |
5 |
In
one abysm of solitude,
Whose hollow antres swoon where Thought
In vain imagines Aught or Naught.
At
time, to ease the jail, we deem
Ourselves companioned in the dream, |
10 |
Conceiving
kindred Spirits share
The doom each soul alone must bear.
They
seem to move and smile and moan
With sense of all the heart hath known,
Which helps the pent-up soul beguile |
15 |
The
tension of its domicile;
Till,
doubtful of the fancied zest
It made to soothe its deep unrest,
Once more the solitary thrall
Ponders the illimitable Wall. |
20 |
“Perchance another Thought supreme
Includes the Dreamer and the Dream?
Or doth the soundless Prison zone
Confine One absolutely lone?”
’T
is only when Love’s angel eyes |
25 |
Gaze
steadfast from a mortal guise,
Tranquil, sincere, divine, devout,
They still the tumult of the Doubt. [Page
108]
Then,
prisoning Power, we do accept
The Mystery that Thou hast kept, |
30 |
And
cheerful in Thy bondage dwell,
Blest creatures of Thy miracle. [Page
109] |
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