The Garden, Aldous Huxley The Garden There shall be dark trees round me:—I insist On cypresses: I'm terribly romantic— And glimpsed between shall move the whole Atlantic, Now leaden dull, now subtle with grey mist, Now many jewelled, when the waves are kissed By revelling sunlight and the corybantic South-Western wind: so, troubled, passion-frantic, The poet's mind boils gold and amethyst. There shall be seen the infinite endeavour Of a sad fountain, white against the sky And poised as it strains up, but doomed to break In weeping music; ever fair and ever Young ... and the bright-eyed wood-gods as they slake Their thirst in it, are silent, reverently ... The end