In a royal garden in autumn’s decay I met a mottled statue of a mad king. His crumpled crown of leaf inlay was perched upon his head tilting.
In this motley vale of fallen leaves and maples barren of budding boughs, he bore a scepter of willows weaved and twisted, by mystic rain well dowsed.
The bleak stony face moved its rigid lips to command his hedgerow kingdom’s thralls while his blank eyes in their stare transfixed on me, whom he his newfound jester called.
Though lacking arms, his majesty raised a marbled finger in mocking command, dictating his sane fool to jape, be praised for being the maddest of mad in his land.
Poor Tom’s a-cold, my mouth let out as he haughtily replied with a cold leer, no patience for my well-reasoned doubt that I should bring this fell despot cheer.
The wan harvest moon began to arise in a suitably strange and lunatic way while donning a cunningly dim disguise, eclipsed by the shadows of the day.
I saw: A shroud, a pall, a veil of the mind had set upon my innermost light. Must overthrow this bleak tyrant’s kind and cast down his terrible mental might.
Here satyrs were sane and nymphs unloved. This empire of absurd has ruled long enough. I resolve to break through the darkness above and call the callous old monarch’s bluff.
As the dream fever finally broke in the setting of a sudden sunrise, from the blackness my mind awoke — at last I’d had the courage to open my eyes.