Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Dark Night Of The Mind by John Frederick Freeman
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The Dark Night Of The Mind

    By John Frederick Freeman



    I could not love if my thought loved not too,
    Nor could my body touch the body of you,
    Unless first in the dark night of the mind
    Love had fulfilled what Love had well designed.

    Was it in thought or flesh we walked, when low
    The sun dropped, and the white scar on the hill
    Sank into the dark trees?
    Could we indeed so quietly go
    Body by body into that heavenly glow?

    The elms that rose so vast above the mill
    Near leafless were and still;
    But from the branches with such loud unease
    Black flocking starlings mixed their warring cries
    That seemed the greater noise of the creaking mill;
    And every branch and extreme twig was black
    With birds that whistled and heard and whistled back,
    Filling with noise as late with wings the skies.
    Was it their noise we heard,
    Or clamour of other thoughts in our quiet mind that stirred?

    Then through the climbing hazel hedge new thinned
    By the early and rapacious wind,
    We saw the silver birches gleam with light
    Of frozen masts in seas all wild and green.
    O, were they truly trees, or some unseen
    Thought taking on an image dark and bright?
    And did those bodies see them, or the mind?
    And did those bodies face once more the hill
    To bathe in night, or on a darker road
    Our spirits unseeing unwearying rise and rise
    Where these feet never trod?

    From that familiar outer darkness I
    Would rise to the inner, deeper, darker sky
    And find you in my spirit--or find you not,
    O, never, never, if not in my thought.



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