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A poem by James Weldon Johnson |
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Vashti |
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Title: Vashti Author: James Weldon Johnson [More Titles by Johnson] I sometimes take you in my dreams to a far-off land I used to know, A land, by night, of jeweled skies, by day, of shores that glistened bright, Where twilight fell like silver floss, where rose the golden moon half-hid And there the days dreamed in their flight, each one a poem chanted through, And you were a princess in those days. And I--I was your serving lad. And if that word you chanced to speak, how all my senses swayed and reeled, If, when your golden cup I bore, you deigned to lower your eyes to mine, I trembled at the thought to dare to gaze upon, to scrutinize To let my timid glances rest upon you long enough to note But though I did not dare to chance a lingering look, an open gaze I fancy, too, (but could not state what trick of mind the fancy caused) Once when my eyes met yours it seemed that in your cheek, despite your pride, Within your radiance like the star of morning, there I stood and served, Ah! just to stretch my hand and touch the musky sandals on your feet!-- Oh, beauty-haunted memory! Your face so proud, your eyes so calm, Caught up beneath your slender arms, and girdled 'round your supple waist, A golden band about your head, a crimson jewel at your throat But, oh, that mystic bleeding stone, that work of Nature's magic art, Now after ages long and sad, in this stern land we meet anew; And yet, dividing us, I meet a wider gulf than that which stood [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |