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ight living, Grown goodlier of stature, strong, and subtly wise, Stood equal with the men, calm counsellors, ever giving The fire and succour of proud faith and dauntless eyes. And as I journeyed in that land I reached a ruin, The gateway of a lonely and secluded waste, A phantom of forgotten time and ancient doing, Eaten by age and violence, crumbled and defaced. On its grim outer walls the ancient world's sad glories Were recorded in fire; upon its inner stone, Drawn by dead hands, I saw, in tales and tragic stories, The woe and sickness of an age of fear made known. And lo, in that grey storehouse, fallen to dust and rotten, Lay piled the traps and engines of forgotten greed, The tomes of codes and canons, long disused, forgotten, The robes and sacred books of many a vanished creed. An old grave man I found, white-haired and gently spoken, Who, as I questioned, answered with a smile benign, 'Long years have come and gone since these poor gauds were broken, Broken and banished from a life made more divine. 'But still we keep them stored as once our sires deemed fitting, The symbol of dark days and lives remote and strange, Lest o'er the minds of any there should come unwitting The thought of some new order and the lust of change. 'If any grow disturbed, we bring them gently hither, To read the world's grim record and the sombre lore Massed in these pitiless vaults, and they returning thither, Bear with them quieter thoughts, and make for change no more.' And thence I journeyed on by one broad way that bore me Out of that waste, and as I passed by tower and town I saw amid the limitless plain far out before me A long low mountain, blue as beryl, and its crown Was capped by marble roofs that shone like snow for whiteness, Its foot was deep in gardens, and that blossoming plain Seemed in the radiant shower of its majestic brightness A land for gods to dwell in, free from care and pain. And to and forth from that fair mountain like a river Ran many a dim grey road, and on them I could see A multitude of stately forms that seemed for ever Going and coming in bright bands; and near to me Was one that in his journey seemed to dream and linger, Walking at whiles with kingly step, then standing still, And him I met and asked him, pointing with my finger, The meaning of the palace and the lofty hill. Whereto the
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