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    My Room

    by George MacDonald
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    Page 1 of 5
    [To G.E.M.]

    'Tis a little room, my friend;
    A baby-walk from end to end;
    All the things look sadly real,
    This hot noontide's Unideal.
    Seek not refuge at the casement,
    There's no pasture for amazement
    But a house most dim and rusty,
    And a street most dry and dusty;
    Seldom here more happy vision
    Than water-cart's blest apparition,
    We'll shut out the staring space,
    Draw the curtains in its face.

    Close the eyelids of the room,
    Fill it with a scarlet gloom:
    Lo! the walls on every side
    Are transformed and glorified;
    Ceiled as with a rosy cloud
    Furthest eastward of the crowd,
    Blushing faintly at the bliss
    Of the Titan's good-night kiss,
    Which her westward sisters share,--
    Crimson they from breast to hair.
    'Tis the faintest lends its dye
    To my room--ah, not the sky!
    Worthy though to be a room
    Underneath the wonder-dome:
    Look around on either hand,
    Are we not in fairy-land?
    In the ruddy atmosphere
    All familiar things appear
    Glowing with a mystery
    In the red light shadowy;
    Lasting bliss to you and me,
    Colour only though it be.

    Now on the couch, inwrapt in mist
    Of vapourized amethyst,
    Lie, as in a rose's heart;
    Secret things I will impart;
    Any time you would receive them;

    Easier though you will believe them
    In dissolving dreamy red,
    Self-same radiance that is shed
    From the summer-heart of Poet,
    Flushing those that never know it.
    Tell me not the light thou viewest
    Is a false one; 'tis the truest;
    'Tis the light revealing wonder,
    Filling all above and under;
    If in light you make a schism,
    'Tis the deepest in the prism.

    The room looks common; but the fact is
    'Tis a cell of magic practice,
    So disguised by common daylight,
    By its disenchanting grey light,
    Only spirit-eyes, mesmeric,
    See its glories esoteric.
    There, that case against the wall,
    Glowingly purpureal!
    A piano to the prosy--
    Not to us in twilight rosy:
    'Tis a cave where Nereids lie.
    Naiads, Dryads, Oreads sigh,
    Dreaming of the time when they
    Danced in forest and in bay.
    In that chest before your eyes,
    Nature's self enchanted lies;
    Awful hills and midnight woods;
    Sunny rains in solitudes;
    Deserts of unbounded longing;
    Blessed visions, gladness thronging;

    All this globe of life unfoldeth
    In phantom forms that coffer holdeth.
    True, unseen; for 'tis enchanted--
    What is that but kept till wanted?
    Do you hear that voice of singing?
    'Tis the enchantress that is flinging
    Spells around her baby's riot,
    Music's oil the waves to quiet:
    She at once can disenchant them,
    To a lover's wish to grant them;
    She can
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    If you're writing a My Room essay and need some advice, post your George MacDonald essay question on our Facebook page where fellow bookworms are always glad to help!

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