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  • Foster the Light
    BY
    Dylan Thomas


    Foster the light nor veil the manshaped moon,
    Nor weather winds that blow not down the bone,
    But strip the twelve-winded marrow from his circle;
    Master the night nor serve the snowman's brain
    That shapes each bushy item of the air
    Into a polestar pointed on an icicle.

    Murmur of spring nor crush the cockerel's eggs,
    Nor hammer back a season in the figs,
    But graft these four-fruited ridings on your country;
    Farmer in time of frost the burning leagues,
    By red-eyed orchards sow the seeds of snow,
    In your young years the vegetable century.

    And father all nor fail the fly-lord's acre,
    Nor sprout on owl-seed like a goblin-sucker,
    But rail with your wizard's ribs the heart-shaped planet;
    Of mortal voices to the ninnies' choir,
    High lord esquire, speak up the singing cloud,
    And pluck a mandrake music from the marrowroot.

    Roll unmanly over this turning tuft,
    O ring of seas, nor sorrow as I shift
    From all my mortal lovers with a starboard smile;
    Nor when my love lies in the cross-boned drift
    Naked among the bow-and-arrow birds
    Shall you turn cockwise on a tufted axle.

    Who gave these seas their colour in a shape,
    Shaped my clayfellow, and the heaven's ark
    In time at flood filled with his coloured doubles;
    O who is glory in the shapeless maps,
    Now make the world of me as I have made
    A merry manshape of your walking circle.

       
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