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				Title:     Italy 
			    
Author: Aldous Huxley [
More Titles by Huxley]		                
			    
There is a country in my mind,
 Lovelier than a poet blind
 Could dream of, who had never known
 This world of drought and dust and stone
 In all its ugliness: a place
 Full of an all but human grace;
 Whose dells retain the printed form
 Of heavenly sleep, and seem yet warm
 From some pure body newly risen;
 Where matter is no more a prison,
 But freedom for the soul to know
 Its native beauty. For things glow
 There with an inward truth and are
 All fire and colour like a star.
 And in that land are domes and towers
 That hang as light and bright as flowers
 Upon the sky, and seem a birth
 Rather of air than solid earth.
 Sometimes I dream that walking there
 In the green shade, all unaware
 At a new turn of the golden glade,
 I shall see her, and as though afraid
 Shall halt a moment and almost fall
 For passing faintness, like a man
 Who feels the sudden spirit of Pan
 Brimming his narrow soul with all
 The illimitable world. And she,
 Turning her head, will let me see
 The first sharp dawn of her surprise
 Turning to welcome in her eyes.
 And I shall come and take my lover
 And looking on her re-discover
 All her beauty:--her dark hair
 And the little ears beneath it, where
 Roses of lucid shadow sleep;
 Her brooding mouth, and in the deep
 Wells of her eyes reflected stars ...
 Oh, the imperishable things
 That hands and lips as well as words
 Shall speak! Oh movement of white wings,
 Oh wheeling galaxies of birds ...!
[The end]
Aldous Huxley's poem: Italy
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