Mandragora/The Book

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
For works with similar titles, see The Book.
585187Mandragora — The BookJohn Cowper Powys

THE BOOK

I MOVED from the sun-warmed garden-seat,
  Where the damask-rose petals covered the
     ground,
And all the people with quiet feet
   Followed the mass-bell's holy sound.

I left the terrace; I wandered away,
   Past larkspur and lilies and monk's-hood tall,
To where the lake in its reed-bed lay,
   On the sunset-side of the castle wall.

With a thousand years in its human sigh
   The vesper murmur came to me
Of the people's patient piety;
   Then my heart stopped. What did I see?

I saw her — I saw what the moonlit spell
   Summoned by my dark heathen book,
Night by night had brought! Too well
   I saw her. Too well I knew her look.

O lost one — lost one — from days long dead,
   When love gave all and died when it gave!
O head thrown back! O arms outspread!
   O passion stronger than the grave!

When the people returned on quiet feet
   From following the mass-bell's holy sound,

They found me still on that sun-warmed seat,
   With the damask-rose petals strewn on the
     ground.

But they did not know that their voices took
   A tone like the wind in a sepulchre;
They did not know that a heathen book
   Had made me a monk for evermore!