Of Absence, Darkness, Death: Things Which Are Not, Ray Bradbury Of absence, darkness, death: things which are not Each unshaped shape resembles Some midnight soul That "with Nothing trembles." Blind skies, cloudless dimensions; Do smother souls Whose nameless apprehensions Go unborn; all's diminution; No spirit-fire flares, no apparition Leans forth its faceless face from looking-glass Or windowpane. The rain wears only wind, while wind wears rain, And when the wind with winter-white bestows A-spectral ice, there no ghost goes. All attics empty, all breezeways, bare, No phantom, prideless, restless, drifts his dustprints there. The autumn round all dreamless goes; no seamless shrouds, No palaces of callous stars, no marble clouds, The earthen basements drink no blood All is a vacuumed neighborhood, Not even dark keeps dark or death hides death, And sightless pulse of panics keep their breath. Nor does a ghostless curtain pale the air All absence is, beyond the everywhere. Then why this unplumbed drowning-pool of fear? My soul dissembles Like unit candles blown down-wind where nothing trembles With bloodless, lifeless snowchild's seed Miscarried by nobody's blood and need, No moans, no cries No blizzard mourns of silent celebration Whose tongueless population Stays unborn-dead. But in my mindless marrow-bed: Fears unremembered How then forgot? Yet: Absence, darkness, death: things which are not. The end