| Midnight has come, and the great Christ Church Bell |
| And many a lesser bell sound
through the room; |
| And it is All Souls Night, |
| And two long glasses brimmed with muscatel |
| Bubble upon
the table. A ghost may come; |
| For it is a ghosts right, |
| His element is so fine |
| Being sharpened by his
death, |
| To drink from the wine-breath |
| While our gross palates drink from the whole wine. |
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|
|
|
| I need some
mind that, if the cannon sound |
| From every quarter of the world, can stay |
| Wound in minds pondering |
| As
mummies in the mummy-cloth are wound; |
| Because I have a marvellous thing to say, |
| A certain marvellous
thing |
| None but the living mock, |
| Though not for sober ear; |
| It may be all that hear |
| Should laugh and weep
an hour upon the clock. |
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|
|
|
| Hortons the first I call. He loved strange thought |
| And knew that sweet extremity
of pride |
| Thats called platonic love, |
| And that to such a pitch of passion wrought |
| Nothing could bring him,
when his lady died, |
| Anodyne for his love. |
| Words were but wasted breath; |
| One dear hope had he: |
| The
inclemency |
| Of that or the next winter would be death. |
|
|
|
|
| Two thoughts were so mixed up I could not tell |
| Whether of her or God he thought the most, |
| But think that his minds eye, |
| When upward turned, on
one sole image fell; |
| And that a slight companionable ghost, |
| Wild with divinity, |
| Had so lit up the whole |
| Immense miraculous house |
| The Bible promised us, |
| It seemed a gold-fish swimming in a bowl. |
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|
|
|
| On Florence
Emery I call the next, |
| Who finding the first wrinkles on a face |
| Admired and beautiful, |
| And knowing that
the future would be vexed |
| With minished beauty, multiplied commonplace, |
| Preferred to teach a school |
| Away from neighbour or friend, |
| Among dark skins, and there |
| Permit foul years to wear |
| Hidden from
eyesight to the unnoticed end. |
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|
|
|
| Before that end much had she ravelled out |
| From a discourse in figurative
speech |
| By some learned Indian |
| On the souls journey. How it is whirled about, |
| Wherever the orbit of
the moon can reach, |
| Until it plunge into the sun; |
| And there, free and yet fast, |
| Being both Chance and
Choice, |
| Forget its broken toys |
| And sink into its own delight at last. |
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|
|
|
| And I call up MacGregor from the
grave, |
| For in my first hard springtime we were friends, |
| Although of late estranged. |
| I thought him half a
lunatic, half knave, |
| And told him so, but friendship never ends; |
| And what if mind seem changed, |
| And it
seem changed with the mind, |
| When thoughts rise up unbid |
| On generous things that he did |
| And I grow
half contented to be blind! |
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|
|
|
| He had much industry at setting out, |
| Much boisterous courage, before loneliness |
| Had driven him crazed; |
| For meditations upon unknown thought |
| Make human intercourse grow less and
less; |
| They are neither paid nor praised. |
| But hed object to the host, |
| The glass because my glass; |
| A
ghost-lover he was |
| And may have grown more arrogant being a ghost. |
|
|
|
|
| But names are nothing. What
matter who it be, |
| So that his elements have grown so fine |
| The fume of muscatel |
| Can give his sharpened
palate ecstasy. |
| No living man can drink from the whole wine. |
| I have mummy truths to tell |
| Whereat the
living mock, |
| Though not for sober ear, |
| For maybe all that hear |
| Should laugh and weep an hour upon the
clock. |
|
|
|
|
| Such thoughtsuch thought have I that hold it tight |
| Till meditation master all its parts, |
| Nothing
can stay my glance |
| Until that glance run in the worlds despite |
| To where the damned have howled away
their hearts, |
| And where the blessed dance; |
| Such thought, that in it bound |
| I need no other thing, |
| Wound
in minds wandering |
| As mummies in the mummy-cloth are wound. |
| Oxford, 1920 |