On Hampstead Heath, Aldous Huxley ON HAMPSTEAD HEATH BENEATH the sunlight and blue of all-but Autumn   The grass sleeps goldenly; woodland and distant hill Shine through the gauzy air in a dust of golden pollen,   And even the glittering leaves are almost still. Scattered on the grass, like a ragman’s bundles carelessly dropped,   Men sleep outstretched or, sprawling, bask in the sun; Here glows a woman’s bright dress and here a child is sitting,   And I lie down and am one of the sleepers, one Like the rest of this tumbled crowd. Do they all, I wonder,   Feel anguish grow with the calm day’s slow decline, Longing, as I, for a shattering wind, a passion   Of bodily pain to be the soul’s anodyne? The end