Page:Selected Poems (Huxley).djvu/43

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POINTS AND LINES.

Instants in the quiet, small sharp stars,
Pierce my spirit with a thrust whose speed
Baffles even the grasp of time.
Oh that I might reflect them
As swiftly, as keenly as they shine.
But I am a pool of waters, summer-still,
And the stars are mirrored across me;
Those stabbing points of the sky
Turned to a thread of shaken silver,
A long fine thread.



PANIC.


The eyes of the portraits on the wall
Look at me, follow me,
Stare incessantly:
It take it their glance means nothing at all?
—Clearly, oh clearly! Nothing at all. . . .

Out in the gardens by the lake
The sleeping peacocks suddenly wake;
Out in the gardens, moonlit and forlorn,
Each of them sounds his mournful horn:
Shrill peals that waver and crack and break.
What can have made the peacocks wake?