Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Pre-Ordination. by Madison Julius Cawein
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Pre-Ordination.

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    She bewitched me in my childhood,
    And the witch's charm is hidden -
    Far beyond the wicked wildwood
    I shall find it, I am bidden.

    She commands me, she who bound me
    With soft sorcery to follow;
    In a golden snare who wound me
    To her bosom's snowy hollow....

    Comes a night-dark stallion sired
    Of the wind; a mare his mother
    Whom Thessalian madness fired,
    And the hurricane his brother.

    Then my soul delays no longer:
    Though the night around is scowling,
    Keenly mount him blacker, stronger
    Than the tempest that is howling.

    At our ears wild shadows whistle;
    Brazen forks the lightning o'er us
    Flames; and huge the thunder's missile
    Bursts behind us, drags before us.

    Over fire-scorched fields of stubble;
    Iron forests dark with wonder;
    Evil marshes black with trouble;
    Nightmare torrents thundering under:

    In the thorn that past us races,
    Harelipped hags like crows are rocking;
    Stunted oaks have dwarf-like faces
    Gnarled that leer an impish mocking:

    Rocks, in which the storm is hooting,
    Thrust a humpbacked murder over;
    Bristling heaths, dead thistles shooting,
    Raven-haunted gibbets cover:

    Each and all are passed, like water
    Under-rolled into a cavern,
    Till we see the Devil's daughter
    Waiting at the Devil's tavern.

    And we stay; I drain the beaker
    In her hand; the draught is fire;
    World-remembrances grow weaker,
    And my spirit, one desire.

    Course it! course it! Darkness passes
    Like an uprolled banner tattered;
    Walled before us mountain masses
    Rise like centuries unscattered.

    And the storm flies ragged. Slowly
    Comes a moon of copper-color,
    And the evil night grows holy,
    Mists the wild ride growing duller.

    In the round moon's angry scanning,
    Demon-swift cross spider arches
    Of the web-thick bridges spanning
    Chasms of her kingdom's marches.

    We have reached her kingdom, olden
    As the sea that sighs its sadness;
    Rocks and trees and sands are golden,
    And the air a golden gladness.

    Shapely ingots are the flowers,
    And the waters, amber brightness;
    Gold-bright, song-birds in the bowers
    Sing with eyes of diamond whiteness.

    And she meets me with a chalice
    Like the Giamschid ruby burning,
    And I drain it without malice,
    To her towers of topaz turning.

    Many hundred years forgetting
    All that's earth: within her power
    I possess her: naught regretting
    Since each year is as an hour.



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