The Poetry Corner

Bad Dreams III

By Robert Browning

This was my dream: I saw a Forest Old as the earth, no track nor trace Of unmade man. Thou, Soul, explorest, Though in a trembling rapture, space Immeasurable! Shrubs, turned trees, Trees that touch heaven, support its frieze Studded with sun and moon and star: While, oh, the enormous growths that bar Mine eye from penetrating past Their tangled twins where lurks, nay, lives Royally lone, some brute-type cast I the rough, time cancels, man forgives. On, Soul! I saw a lucid City Of architectural device Every way perfect. Pause for pity, Lightning! nor leave a cicatrice On those bright marbles, dome and spire, Structures palatial, streets which mire Dares not defile, paved all too fine For human footsteps smirch, not thine, Proud solitary traverser, My Soul, of silent lengths of way, With what ecstatic dread, aver, Lest life start sanctioned by thy stay! All, but the last sight was the hideous! A City, yes, a Forest, true, But each devouring each. Perfidious Snake-plants had strangled what I knew Was a pavilion once: each oak Held on his horns some spoil he broke By surreptitiously beneath Upthrusting: pavements, as with teeth, Griped huge weed widening crack and split In squares and circles stone-work erst. Oh, Nature, good! Oh, Art, no whit Less worthy! Both in one, accurst!