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				Title:     Song Of Poplars 
			    
Author: Aldous Huxley [
More Titles by Huxley]		                
			    
Shepherd, to yon tall poplars tune your flute:
 Let them pierce, keenly, subtly shrill,
 The slow blue rumour of the hill;
 Let the grass cry with an anguish of evening gold,
 And the great sky be mute.
 Then hearken how the poplar trees unfold
 Their buds, yet close and gummed and blind,
 In airy leafage of the mind,
 Rustling in silvery whispers the twin-hued scales
 That fade not nor grow old.
 "Poplars and fountains and you cypress spires
 Springing in dark and rusty flame,
 Seek you aught that hath a name?
 Or say, say: Are you all an upward agony
 Of undefined desires?
 "Say, are you happy in the golden march
 Of sunlight all across the day?
 Or do you watch the uncertain way
 That leads the withering moon on cloudy stairs
 Over the heaven's wide arch?
 "Is it towards sorrow or towards joy you lift
 The sharpness of your trembling spears?
 Or do you seek, through the grey tears
 That blur the sky, in the heart of the triumphing blue,
 A deeper, calmer rift?"
 So; I have tuned my music to the trees,
 And there were voices, dim below
 Their shrillness, voices swelling slow
 In the blue murmur of hills, and a golden cry
 And then vast silences.
[The end]
Aldous Huxley's poem: Song Of Poplars
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