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A vision of life

Chapter 7: “FRIENDS VANISH AT MY FACE”
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About This Book

A sequence of lyrical and visionary poems that probe human experience through nature, memory, and spiritual reflection. Imagery moves from intimate domestic details to wild and mythic landscapes while meters shift between compact lyrics and more elaborate, Elizabethan-influenced lines. recurring concerns include loss and consolation, the passage of time, faith and renewed hope, and occasional public or allegorical addresses. A reflective voice oscillates between melancholy and affirmation, transforming everyday objects and moments into metaphysical insight. The work favors careful reading to appreciate its subtle verbal music, disciplined metrical shaping, and layered symbolism.

Friends vanish at my face; yet, as they fly,
Swoll’n with the sombre mood of conjured schism,
I hear thee say thou whom the holy chrism
Has sealed as mine eternal—“Dear, do I
Outweigh the scales; if this one form be nigh,
Shall that suffice thee in this dark abysm?”
Ah, think, Belov’d! did some great cataclysm
Fierce-swoop upon to enshroud the midnight sky,
Did gulf the multitudinous stars but one,
Some Betelgeuse, in beauty-flame of love
Gleaming and twinkling in the lowly mart
Of tremulous darkness, how ’twould swell upon
The vaults of Heaven; how rare so poised above!
Even so in lone magnificence thou art!