Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Elusion by Madison Julius Cawein
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Elusion

    By Madison Julius Cawein



I.

    My soul goes out to her who says,
    "Come, follow me and cast off care!"
    Then tosses back her sun-bright hair,
    And like a flower before me sways
    Between the green leaves and my gaze:
    This creature like a girl, who smiles
    Into my eyes and softly lays
    Her hand in mine and leads me miles,
    Long miles of haunted forest ways.

II.

    Sometimes she seems a faint perfume,
    A fragrance that a flower exhaled
    And God gave form to; now, unveiled,
    A sunbeam making gold the gloom
    Of vines that roof some woodland room
    Of boughs; and now the silvery sound
    Of streams her presence doth assume
    Music, from which, in dreaming drowned,
    A crystal shape she seems to bloom.

III.

    Sometimes she seems the light that lies
    On foam of waters where the fern,
    Shimmers and drips; now, at some turn
    Of woodland, bright against the skies,
    She seems the rainbowed mist that flies;
    And now the mossy fire that breaks
    Beneath the feet in azure eyes
    Of flowers; now the wind that shakes
    Pale petals from the bough that sighs.

IV.

    Sometimes she lures me with a song;
    Sometimes she guides me with a laugh;
    Her white hand is a magic staff,
    Her look a spell to lead me long:
    Though she be weak and I be strong,
    She needs but shake her happy hair,
    But glance her eyes, and, right or wrong,
    My soul must follow anywhere
    She wills far from the world's loud throng.

V.

    Sometimes I think that she must be
    No part of earth, but merely this
    The fair, elusive thing we miss
    In Nature, that we dream we see
    Yet never see: that goldenly
    Beckons; that, limbed with rose and pearl,
    The Greek made a divinity:
    A nymph, a god, a glimmering girl,
    That haunts the forest's mystery.



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