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Edgar Allan Poe - For AnnieEdgar Allan Poe - For Annie
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Thank Heaven! the crisis-              The danger is past,            And the lingering illness              Is over at last-            And the fever called "Living"              Is conquered at last.            Sadly, I know              I am shorn of my strength,            And no muscle I move              As I lie at full length-            But no matter!-I feel              I am better at length.            And I rest so composedly,              Now, in my bed            That any beholder              Might fancy me dead-            Might start at beholding me,              Thinking me dead.            The moaning and groaning,              The sighing and sobbing,            Are quieted now,              With that horrible throbbing            At heart:- ah, that horrible,              Horrible throbbing!            The sickness- the nausea-              The pitiless pain-            Have ceased, with the fever              That maddened my brain-            With the fever called "Living"              That burned in my brain.            And oh! of all tortures              That torture the worst            Has abated- the terrible              Torture of thirst            For the naphthaline river              Of Passion accurst:-            I have drunk of a water              That quenches all thirst:-            Of a water that flows,              With a lullaby sound,            From a spring but a very few              Feet under ground-            From a cavern not very far              Down under ground.            And ah! let it never              Be foolishly said            That my room it is gloomy              And narrow my bed;            For man never slept              In a different bed-            And, to sleep, you must slumber              In just such a bed.            My tantalized spirit              Here blandly reposes,            Forgetting, or never              Regretting its roses-            Its old agitations              Of myrtles and roses:            For now, while so quietly              Lying, it fancies            A holier odor              About it, of pansies-            A rosemary odor,              Commingled with pansies-            With rue and the beautiful              Puritan pansies.            And so it lies happily,              Bathing in many            A dream of the truth              And the beauty of Annie-            Drowned in a bath              Of the tresses of Annie.            She tenderly kissed me,              She fondly caressed,            And then I fell gently              To sleep on her breast-            Deeply to sleep              From the heaven of her breast.            When the light was extinguished,              She covered me warm,            And she prayed to the angels              To keep me from harm-            To the queen of the angels              To shield me from harm.            And I lie so composedly,              Now, in my bed,            (Knowing her love)              That you fancy me dead-            And I rest so contentedly,              Now, in my bed,            (With her love at my breast)              That you fancy me dead-            That you shudder to look at me,              Thinking me dead.            But my heart it is brighter              Than all of the many            Stars in the sky,              For it sparkles with Annie-            It glows with the light              Of the love of my Annie-            With the thought of the light              Of the eyes of my Annie.
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