The Poetry Corner

The Night Forest

By Clark Ashton Smith

Incumbent seemingly On the jagged points of peaks That end the visible west, The rounded moon yet floods The valleys hitherward With fall of torrential light, Ere from the overmost Aggressive mountain-cusp, She slip to the lower dark. But here, on an eastward slope Pointed and thick with its pine, The forest scarcely remembers Her light that is gone as a vision Or ecstasy too poignant And perilous for duration. Withdrawn in what darker web Or dimension of dream I know not, In silence pre-occupied And solemnest rectitude The pines uprear, and no sigh For the rapture of moonlight past, Comes from their bosom of boughs. Far in their secrecy I stand, and the burden of dusk Dull, but at times made keen With tingle of fragrances, Falls on me as a veil Between my soul and the world. What veil of trance, O pines, Divides you from my soul, That I feel but enter not Your distances of dream? Ah! strange, imperative sense Of world-deep mystery That shakes from out your boughs - A fragrance yet more keen, Pressing upon the mind. The wind shall question you Of the dream I may not gain, And all its sombreness And depth immeasurable, Shall tremble away in sound Of speech not understood That my heart must break to hear.