Page:The Poet in the Desert.djvu/9

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THE POET IN THE DESERT

PROLOGUE


POET:

I have entered into the Desert, the place of desolation.
The Desert confronts me haughtily and assails me with solitude.
She sits on a throne of light,
Her hands clasped, her eyes solemnly questioning.
I have come into the lean and stricken land
Which fears not God, that I may meet my soul
Face to face, naked as the Desert is naked;
Bare as the great silence is bare:


I will question the Silent Ones who have gone before and are forgotten,
And the great host which shall come after.
By whom I also shall be forgot.
As the Desert is defiant unto all gods,
So am I defiant of all gods,
Shadows of Man cast upon the fogs of his ignorance.
As a helpless child follows the hand of its mother.
So I put my hand into the hand of the Eternal.


I have come to lose myself in the wide immensity and know my littleness.
I have come to lie in the lap of my mother and be comforted.
I am alone but not alone—I am with myself.
My soul is my companion above all companions.


Behold the signs of the Desert:
A buzzard, afloat on airy seas,

Alone, between the two immensities, as I am alone between two immensities;

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