| My father kept a vaulted conch
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| By two bronze bookends of ships in sail,
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| And as I listened its cold teeth seethed
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| With voices of that ambiguous sea
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| Old Böcklin missed, who held a shell
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| To hear the sea he could not hear.
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| What the seashell spoke to his inner ear
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| He knew, but no peasants know.
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| My father died, and when he died
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| He willed his books and shell away.
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| The books burned up, sea took the shell,
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| But I, I keep the voices he
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| Set in my ear, and in my eye
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| The sight of those blue, unseen waves
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| For which the ghost of Böcklin grieves.
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| The peasants feast and multiply.
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| Eclipsing the spitted ox I see
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| Neither brazen swan nor burning star,
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| Heraldry of a starker age,
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| But three men entering the yard,
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| And those men coming up the stair.
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| Profitless, their gossiping images
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| Invade the cloistral eye like pages
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| From a gross comic strip, and toward
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| The happening of this happening
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| The earth turns now. |
| In half an hour
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| I shall go down the shabby stair and meet,
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| Coming up, those three. |
| Worth
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| Less than present, past — this future.
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| Worthless such vision to eyes gone dull
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| That once descried Troy’s towers fall,
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| Saw evil break out of the north. |