My Two Geniuses

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My Two Geniuses

One is a slow and melancholy maid;

I know riot if she cometh from the skies

Or from the sleepy gulfs, but she will rise

Often before me in the twilight shade,

Holding a bunch of poppies and a blade

Of springing wheat: prostrate my body lies

Before her on the turf, the while she ties

A fillet of the weed about my head;

And in the gaps of sleep I seem to hear

A gentle rustle like the stir of corn,

And words like odours thronging to my ear:

“Lie still, beloved⁠—still until the morn;

Lie still with me upon this rolling sphere⁠—

Still till the judgment; thou art faint and worn.”

The other meets me in the public throng;

Her hair streams backward from her loose attire;

She hath a trumpet and an eye of fire;

She points me downward, steadily and long:⁠—

“There is thy grave⁠—arise, my son, be strong!

Hands are upon thy crown⁠—awake, aspire

To immortality; heed not the lyre

Of the Enchantress, nor her poppy-song,

But in the stillness of the summer calm

Tremble for what is Godlike in thy being.

Listen a while, and thou shall hear the psalm

Of victory sung by creatures past thy seeing;

And from far battle-fields there comes the neighing

Of dreadful onset, though the air is balm.”

Maid with the poppies, must I let thee go?

Alas, I may not; thou art likewise dear!

I am but human, and thou hast a tear

When she hath nought but splendour, and the glow

Of a wild energy that mocks the flow

Of the poor sympathies which keep us here:

Lay past thy poppies, and come twice as near,

And I will teach thee, and thou too shalt grow;

And thou shalt walk with me in open day

Through the rough thoroughfares with quiet grace;

And the wild-visaged maid shall lead the way,

Timing her footsteps to a gentler pace

As her great orbs turn ever on thy face,

Drinking in draughts of loving help alway.