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Black Beetles in Amber

Chapter 5: THE KEY NOTE
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About This Book

The collection gathers short poems, sketches, and satirical vignettes that blend bitter humor, morbid imagination, and pointed social criticism. Many pieces turn on mortality, revenge, and ironic justice, employing grotesque or supernatural imagery and concise, epigrammatic endings. Political and cultural targets are skewered with sarcasm, while lyrical interludes and philosophical reflections punctuate the tone. Overall the volume alternates whimsy and cynicism, offering compact explorations of human folly, moral ambiguity, and the absurdities of public life.

THE KEY NOTE

  I dreamed I was dreaming one morn as I lay
    In a garden with flowers teeming.
  On an island I lay in a mystical bay,
    In the dream that I dreamed I was dreaming.

  The ghost of a scent—had it followed me there
    From the place where I truly was resting?
  It filled like an anthem the aisles of the air,
    The presence of roses attesting.

  Yet I thought in the dream that I dreamed I dreamed
    That the place was all barren of roses—
  That it only seemed; and the place, I deemed,
    Was the Isle of Bewildered Noses.

  Full many a seaman had testified
    How all who sailed near were enchanted,
  And landed to search (and in searching died)
    For the roses the Sirens had planted.

  For the Sirens were dead, and the billows boomed
    In the stead of their singing forever;
  But the roses bloomed on the graves of the doomed,
    Though man had discovered them never.

  I thought in my dream 'twas an idle tale,
    A delusion that mariners cherished—
  That the fragrance loading the conscious gale
    Was the ghost of a rose long perished.

  I said, "I will fly from this island of woes."
    And acting on that decision,
  By that odor of rose I was led by the nose,
    For 'twas truly, ah! truly, Elysian.

  I ran, in my madness, to seek out the source
    Of the redolent river—directed
  By some supernatural, sinister force
    To a forest, dark, haunted, infected.

  And still as I threaded ('twas all in the dream
    That I dreamed I was dreaming) each turning
  There were many a scream and a sudden gleam
    Of eyes all uncannily burning!

  The leaves were all wet with a horrible dew
    That mirrored the red moon's crescent,
  And all shapes were fringed with a ghostly blue,
    Dim, wavering, phosphorescent.

  But the fragrance divine, coming strong and free,
    Led me on, though my blood was clotting,
  Till—ah, joy!—I could see, on the limbs of a tree,
    Mine enemies hanging and rotting!