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Mysteries

Topics: classic

Soft and silken and silvery brown,     In shoes of lichen and leafy gown,     Little blue butterflies fluttering around her,     Deep in the forest, afar from town,     There where a stream came trickling down,     I met with Silence, who wove a crown     Of sleep whose mystery bound her.     I gazed in her eyes, that were mossy green     As the rain that pools in a hollow between     The twisted roots of a tree that towers:     And I saw the things that none has seen,     That mean far more than facts may mean,     The dreams, that are true, of an age that has been,     That God has thought into flowers.     I gazed on her lips, that were dewy gray     As the mist that clings, at the close of day,     To the wet hillside when the winds cease blowing;     And I heard the things that none may say,     That are holier far than the prayers we pray,     The murmured music God breathes alway     Through the hearts of all things growing.     Soft and subtle and vapory white,     In shoes of shadow and gown of light,     Crimson poppies asleep around her,     Far in the forest, beneath a height,     I came on Slumber, who wove from night     A wreath of silence, that, darkly bright,     With its mystic beauty bound her.     I looked in her face that was pale and still     As the moon that rises above the hill     Where the pines loom sombre as sorrow:     And the things that all have known and will,     I knew for a moment: the myths that fill     And people the past of the soul and thrill     Its hope with a far to-morrow.     I heard her voice, that was strange with pain     As a wind that whispers of wreck and rain     To the leaves of the autumn rustling lonely:     And I felt the things that are felt in vain     By all the longings that haunt the brain     Of man, that come and depart again     And are part of his dreamings only.

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"Soft and silken and silvery brown,..."

Madison Julius Cawein's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Mysteries"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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