The Nightmare Lake

Written 1919


        
		There is a lake in distant Zan,
		Beyond the wonted haunts of man,
		Where broods alone in a hideous state
		A spirit dead and desolate.
		A spirit ancient and unholy,
		Heavy with fearsome melancholy,
		Which from the waters dull and dense
		Draws vapors cursed with pestilence.
		Around the banks a mire of clay,
		Crawl things offensive in decay,
		And curious birds that reach the shore
		Are seen by mortals nevermore.
		Here shines by day the searing sun
		On glassy wastes beheld by none,
		And here by night pale moon beams flow
		Into the deeps that yawn below.
		In nightmares only it is told
		What scenes beneath those beams unfold;
		What scenes, too old for human sight,
		Lie sunken there in endless night;
		For in those depths there only pace
		The shadows of a voiceless race.
		One midnight, redolent of ill,
		I saw that lake, asleep and still;
		While in the lurid sky there rode
		A gibbous moon that glow'd and glow'd.
		I saw the stretching marshy shore
		And the foul things those marshes bore:
		Lizards and snakes convuls'd and dying;
		Ravens and vampires putrefying;
		All these and hov'ring o'er the dead,
		Narcophagi that on them fed.
		And as the dreadful moon climbed high,
		Fright'ning the stars from out the sky,
		I saw the lake's dull waters glow
		Till sunken things appeared below.
		There shown unnumbered fathoms down,
		The towers of a forgotten town;
		The tarnished domes and mossy walls;
		Weed tangles spires and empty halls;
		Deserted fanes and vaults of dread,
		And streets of gold uncoveted.
		These I beheld and saw beside
		A horde of shapeless shadows glide;
		A noxious horde which to my glance
		Seem'd moving in a hideous dance
		Round slimy sepulchres that lay
		Beside a never travelled way.
		Straight from the tombs a heaving rose
		That vex'd the waters' dull repose,
		While lethal shades of upper space
		Howl'd at the moon's sardonic face.
		Then sank the lake within its bed,
		Sucked down to caverns of the dead,
		Till from the reeking new-stript earth
		Curl'd fetid fumes of noisome birth.
		About the city, nigh uncover'd,
		The monstrous dancing shadows hover'd,
		When lo! There oped with a sudden stir
		The portal of each sepulchre!
		No ear may learn; no tongue may tell
		What nameless horror then befell.
		I see that lake - that moon agrin -
		That city and the things within -
		Waking, I pray that on that shore
		The nightmare lake may sink no more! 

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