Blood and the Moon
Blessed be this place, | More blessed still this tower; | A bloody, arrogant power | Rose out of the race | Uttering, mastering it, | Rose like these walls from these | Storm-beaten cottages | In mockery I have set | A powerful emblem up, | And sing it rhyme upon rhyme | In mockery of a time | Half dead at the top. | | | | | | | | | Alexandrias was a beacon tower, and Babylons | An image of the moving heavens, a log-book of the
suns journey and the moons; | And Shelley had his towers, thoughts crowned powers he called them
once. | | | | | I declare this tower is my symbol; I declare | This winding, gyring, spiring treadmill of a stair is my
ancestral stair; | That Goldsmith and the Dean, Berkeley and Burke have travelled there. | | | | | Swift beating
on his breast in sibylline frenzy blind | Because the heart in his blood-sodden breast had dragged him
down into mankind, | Goldsmith deliberately sipping at the honey-pot of his mind, | | | | | And haughtier-headed
Burke that proved the State a tree, | That this unconquerable labyrinth of the birds, century after century, | Cast but dead leaves to mathematical equality; | | | | | And God-appointed Berkeley that proved all things a
dream, | That this pragmatical, preposterous pig of a world, its farrow that so solid seem, | Must vanish
on the instant if the mind but change its theme; | | | | | Saeva Indignatio and the labourers hire, | The strength
that gives our blood and state magnanimity of its own desire; | Everything that is not God consumed with
intellectual fire. | | | | | | | | | The purity of the unclouded moon | Has flung its arrowy shaft upon the floor. | Seven
centuries have passed and it is pure, | The blood of innocence has left no stain. | There, on blood-saturated
ground, have stood | Soldier, assassin, executioner, | Whether for daily pittance or in blind fear | Or out of
abstract hatred, and shed blood, | But could not cast a single jet thereon. | Odour of blood on the ancestral
stair! | And we that have shed none must gather there | And clamour in drunken frenzy for the moon. | | | | | | | | | Upon the dusty, glittering windows cling, | And seem to cling upon the moonlit skies, | Tortoiseshell butterflies,
peacock butterflies, | A couple of night-moths are on the wing. | Is every modern nation like the tower, | Half
dead at the top? No matter what I said, | For wisdom is the property of the dead, | A something incompatible
with life; and power, | Like everything that has the stain of blood, | A property of the living; but no stain | Can
come upon the visage of the moon | When it has looked in glory from a cloud. |
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By PanEris
using Melati.
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