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I wandered up a mountain pass      to leave the world behind.   I have no children, nor a wife,   nor anything to call a life. This sojourn through the world, alas,      is all I know as mine. I was a denizen - the last -      and here I am, one still, yet wand'ring through the wooded path,      and o'er the rolling hill. My heart went to the mountains bare,      into the wooded night,   where darkness fell as thick as clay   and murdered memory of day, to see if dawn could conquer there      and set the woods alight. Though, when she came at last to see      the darkness falling thick,   She reached out to the tallest tree      and lit it like a wick. The embers danced from leaf to leaf and spread the flame from high to low. The mountains turned a burning wreath of blinding light from morning glow. The forest smoked and fell to ash - my heart fell with it, smitten dust, and blanketed the earth at last, my birth; now death the only must. The rains fall on that mountain high      and soak the ashen earth   then wash into a small ravine   that widens to a narrow stream - my heart and blood flow with it, nigh      upon a gliding mirth. Then suddenly, it turns to wrath      becomes a river wide; the torrent cuts a canyon path      into the mountainside and digs into the world deep      and chisels through her bones and courses through her weathered vanes      and echoes in her groans. The river and my blood flow through      the underground below,   in silent limestone caves, alight   with glow-worms in their cavern-night, emerging at the ocean blue     to join the ebb and flow. My soul went to the mountains clean,      unfettered by the mind.   A wind - turned from the gilded plain   now drinking deep the ocean rain - whistling through the valley green,      delivers me from time. The Mountains rise and crash like waves,      in laughter at the Tides:   a frenzied chase around the world   the moon, that pale translucent pearl, with crests that reach for heaven, crave,      eternally deprived. Why hurry on, sweet crashing Sea,      Why rush? The Mountains ask.    Dear Mountain, you have much to learn    of seas and oceans, how they turn. 'Tis not a frenzied chore for me,      but an unhurried task. But you, the Ocean says, I see are more laborious than me, though you see such splendid heights it takes ten thousand days and nights to raise a peak, to break a crest against the wind and fall to rest. Indeed it does, the Mountain sighs, and goes about it's steady rise. I went into the mountains lost      and found myself at last   in sun-bright forest, mountain stream,   on rolling hill, by ocean green. I went into the mountains      and I lost myself at last.
0
Nov 5, 2014
Nov 5, 2014 at 2:14 AM UTC
In the mountains.
I wandered up a mountain pass      to leave the world behind.   I have no children, nor a wife,   nor anything to call a life. This sojourn through the world, alas,      is all I know as mine. I was a denizen - the last -      and here I am, one still, yet wand'ring through the wooded path,      and o'er the rolling hill. My heart went to the mountains bare,      into the wooded night,   where darkness fell as thick as clay   and murdered memory of day, to see if dawn could conquer there      and set the woods alight. Though, when she came at last to see      the darkness falling thick,   She reached out to the tallest tree      and lit it like a wick. The embers danced from leaf to leaf and spread the flame from high to low. The mountains turned a burning wreath of blinding light from morning glow. The forest smoked and fell to ash - my heart fell with it, smitten dust, and blanketed the earth at last, my birth; now death the only must. The rains fall on that mountain high      and soak the ashen earth   then wash into a small ravine   that widens to a narrow stream - my heart and blood flow with it, nigh      upon a gliding mirth. Then suddenly, it turns to wrath      becomes a river wide; the torrent cuts a canyon path      into the mountainside and digs into the world deep      and chisels through her bones and courses through her weathered vanes      and echoes in her groans. The river and my blood flow through      the underground below,   in silent limestone caves, alight   with glow-worms in their cavern-night, emerging at the ocean blue     to join the ebb and flow. My soul went to the mountains clean,      unfettered by the mind.   A wind - turned from the gilded plain   now drinking deep the ocean rain - whistling through the valley green,      delivers me from time. The Mountains rise and crash like waves,      in laughter at the Tides:   a frenzied chase around the world   the moon, that pale translucent pearl, with crests that reach for heaven, crave,      eternally deprived. Why hurry on, sweet crashing Sea,      Why rush? The Mountains ask.    Dear Mountain, you have much to learn    of seas and oceans, how they turn. 'Tis not a frenzied chore for me,      but an unhurried task. But you, the Ocean says, I see are more laborious than me, though you see such splendid heights it takes ten thousand days and nights to raise a peak, to break a crest against the wind and fall to rest. Indeed it does, the Mountain sighs, and goes about it's steady rise. I went into the mountains lost      and found myself at last   in sun-bright forest, mountain stream,   on rolling hill, by ocean green. I went into the mountains      and I lost myself at last.
marcus-eliot
Written by
American
Nov 5, 2014
Nov 5, 2014 at 2:14 AM UTC
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