Mole, Aldous Huxley Mole TUNNELLED in solid blackness creeps The old mole-soul, and wakes or sleeps, He knows not which, but tunnels on Through ages of oblivion; Until at last the long constraint Of each hand-wall is lost, and faint Comes daylight creeping from afar, And mole-work grows crepuscular. Tunnel meets air and bursts; mole sees Men as strange as walking trees? And far horizons smoking blue, And chasing clouds for ever new; Green hills, like lighted lamps aglow Or quenched beneath the cloud-shadow; Quenching and blazing turn by turn, Spring’s great green signals fitfully burn. Mole travels on, but finds the steering A harder task of pioneering Than when he thridded through the strait Blind catacombs that ancient fate Had carved for him. Stupid and dumb And blind and touchless he had come A way without a turn; but here, Under the sky, the passenger Chooses his own best way; and mole Distracted wanders, yet his hole Regrets not much wherein he crept, But runs, a joyous nympholept, This way and that, by all made mad— River nymph and oread, Ocean’s daughters and Lorelei, Combing the silken mystery, The glaucous gold of her rivery tresses— Each haunts the traveller, each possesses The drunken wavering soul awhile; Then with a phantom’s cock-crow smile Mocks craving with sheer vanishment. Mole-eyes grow hawk’s: knowledge is lent In grudging driblets that pay high Unconscionable usury. To unrelenting life. Mole learns To travel more secure; the turns Of his long way less puzzling seem, And all those magic forms that gleam In airy invitation cheat Less often than they did of old. The earth slopes upward, fold by fold Of quiet hills that meet the gold Serenity of western skies. Over the world’s edge with clear eyes Our mole transcendent sees his way Tunnelled in light: he must obey Necessity again and thrid Close catacombs as erst he did, Fate’s tunnellings, himself must bore Through the sunset’s inmost core. The guiding walls to each-hand shine Luminous and crystalline; And mole shall tunnel on and on, Till night let fall oblivion. The end