Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Land Of Illusion by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Land Of Illusion

    By Madison Julius Cawein



I


    So we had come at last, my soul and I,
    Into that land of shadowy plain and peak,
    On which the dawn seemed ever about to break
    On which the day seemed ever about to die.


II


    Long had we sought fulfillment of our dreams,
    The everlasting wells of Joy and Youth;
    Long had we sought the snow-white flow'r of Truth,
    That blooms eternal by eternal streams.


III


    And, fonder still, we hoped to find the sweet
    Immortal presence, Love; the bird Delight
    Beside her; and, eyed with sidereal night,
    Faith, like a lion, fawning at her feet.


IV


    But, scorched and barren, in its arid well,
    We found our dreams' forgotten fountain-head;
    And by black, bitter waters, crushed and dead,
    Among wild weeds, Truth's trampled asphodel.


V


    And side by side with pallid Doubt and Pain,
    Not Love, but Grief did meet us there: afar
    We saw her, like a melancholy star,
    Or pensive moon, move towards us o'er the plain.


VI


    Sweet was her face as song that sings of home;
    And filled our hearts with vague, suggestive spells
    Of pathos, as sad ocean fills its shells
    With sympathetic moanings of its foam.


VII


    She raised one hand and pointed silently,
    Then passed; her eyes, gaunt with a thirst unslaked,
    Were worlds of woe, where tears in torrents ached,
    Yet never fell. And like a winter sea,--


VIII


    Whose caverned crags are haunts of wreck and wrath,
    That house the condor pinions of the storm,--
    My soul replied; and, weeping, arm in arm,
    To'ards those dim hills, by that appointed path,


IX


    We turned and went. Arrived, we did discern
    How Beauty beckoned, white 'mid miles of flowers,
    Through which, behold, the amaranthine Hours
    Like maidens went each holding up an urn;


X


    Wherein, it seemed--drained from long chalices
    Of those slim flow'rs--they bore mysterious wine;
    A poppied vintage, full of sleep divine
    And pale forgetting of all miseries.


XI


    Then to my soul I said, "No longer weep.
    Come, let us drink; for hateful is the sky,
    And earth is full of care, and life's a lie.
    So let us drink; yea, let us drink and sleep."


XII


    Then from their brimming urns we drank sweet must,
    While, all around us, rose-crowned faces laughed
    Into our eyes; but hardly had we quaffed
    When, one by one, these crumbled into dust.


XIII


    And league on league the eminence of blooms,
    That flashed and billowed like a summer sea,
    Rolled out a waste of thorns and tombs; where bee
    And butterfly and bird hung dead in looms


XIV


    Of worm and spider. And through tomb and brier,
    A thin wind, parched with thirsty dust and sand,
    Went wailing as if mourning some lost land
    Of perished empire, Babylon or Tyre.


XV


    Long, long with blistered feet we wandered in
    That land of ruins, through whose sky of brass
    Hate's Harpy shrieked; and in whose iron grass
    The Hydra hissed of undestroyable Sin.


XVI


    And there at last, behold, the House of Doom,--
    Red, as if Hell had glared it into life,
    Blood-red, and howling with incessant strife,--
    With burning battlements, towered in the gloom.


XVII


    And throned within sat Darkness.--Who might gaze
    Upon that form, that threatening presence there,
    Crowned with the flickering corpse-lights of Despair,
    And yet escape sans madness and amaze?


XVIII


    And we had hoped to find among these hills
    The House of Beauty!--Curst, yea, thrice accurst,
    The hope that lures one on from last to first
    With vain illusions that no time fulfills!


XIX


    Why will we struggle to attain, and strive,
    When all we gain is but an empty dream?--
    Better, unto my thinking, doth it seem
    To end it all and let who will survive;


XX


    To find at last all beauty is but dust;
    That love and sorrow are the very same;
    That joy is only suffering's sweeter name;
    And sense is but the synonym of lust.


XXI


    Far better, yea, to me it seems to die;
    To set glad lips against the lips of Death--
    The only thing God gives that comforteth,
    The only thing we do not find a lie.



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