When Elephants Last in the Dooryard Bloomed. Ray Bradbury

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When Elephants Last in the Dooryard Bloomed - Ray  Bradbury

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      What shy albino mole peered forth and gave a cry?

      Or was it just the wind asifting through the winter screens

      Upon the attic windows

      Where the dust looks out at dew on empty lawns?

      Or did the dawn mist find a tongue

      And issue like his mystic seaport tides

      From out his mouth while, all-unknowing, drowned, he slept

      And dreamed on … Emily?

      O what a shame, that these two wanderers

      Of three A.M. did not somehow contrive

      To knock each other’s elbows drifting late

      On sidewalks-vast inhabited by only leaves

      And mice and tracks of silver from lost hieroglyphic snails.

      How sad that from a long way off these two

      Did not surprise each other’s ghosts,

      One sailing lawns, the other ocean storms,

      Strike up a conversation out of single simple words,

      Alarms repeated and re-echoed, and so make up a life

      From halves which separated long before the oceans rolled

      Still sought each other, but in different towns.

      Un-met and doomed they went their ways

      To never greet or make mere summer comment

      On her attic mothball or his sea-dog days.

      Death would not stop for her,

      Yet White graves yawned for him,

      Each loved one half of that which, grim, enticed and beckoned,

      Yet neither reckoned it as half a life for each;

      With sudden reach they might have found

      Each other and in meld and fuse and fusion

      Then beheld between the two, two halves of loving Life,

      And so made one!

      Two halves of sun

      To burn away two halves of misery and night,

      Two souls with sight instead of tapping

      Long after midnight souls skinned blind with frost,

      Lost minds turned round-about to flesh,

      Instead of lonely flesh, for lack of company,

      Alone with mind.

      But, then, imagine, what does happen when some ghost

      Of quiet passes and in passing nudges silence?

      Does his silence know her vibrant quiet there

      All drifting on the walk with leaves and dust?

      It must. Or so the old religions say.

      Thus forests know themselves and know the fall

      Of their own timbers dropping in the unseen,

      And so non-existent, wood;

      Such things should hear themselves

      And feel, record, and ridge them in their souls—

      And yet … ?

      I really wonder if some night by chance

      Old Herman and that lost and somehow always old dear Emily

      Out late and walked five hundred miles in dreams

      Might not have made some lone collision

      At a crossroads where the moon was lamp

      And trees were winter sentry to their soft encounter there.

      One pale gaze finds the other,

      One blind hand stutters forth to reach and touch the air,

      His wry hand comes the other way,

      So frail the night wind trembles it,

      Both shake as candles shake their fires

      When old time turns ashuttle in its sleep.

      The houses keep their shutters down.

      The moon expires. The sidewalk ghosts remain

      And, touching palms, at last walk almost but not quite

      Arm in arm, soul hungering soul, away, away

      Toward loss of midnight, toward gain of fog and mist

      And day.

      So walk they round the buried town all night.

      Seeing their spectral shadows in the cold shop window glass,

      Bleak mariner and odd mothball closet attic maiden lass.

      No word they speak, nor whisper, nor does breath

      Escape their nostrils, but they share

      A strange new sense of being, everywhere they wander, go.

      No thought, no word is said of dining,

      Yet in the middle of a midnight pond of grass they do

      Toss down their souls

      And bring some wild thing up that writhes and gasps

      And dances in their arms and is all shining.

      Then on through night the love-drunk strangers browse

      And in conniption clovers do their fevers douse.

      Thus round the courthouse square

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