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In Tibet

In Tibet
 
When I first read about the butter lamps
I could smell the smoke that filled the spacious halls
And darkened tapestries on temple walls.
I heard the call of bells in far-off camps
And stars like candles in the frozen night
Appeared as on the table of a King.
I knew the song the spinning prayer-wheels sing
And recognized this strange familiar site
As one who passes through a childhood town
Remembers lanes forgotten by the rest,
Knows secrets no adult has ever guessed
And every path his feet have travelled down.
I saw in vision’s clear awakened eye
The coloured flags flapping in the wind
The saffron robes native to my kind
And awesome statues of the Deity.
I lived and loved in that transparent air
And rode beneath her skies of ideal blue,
I died in fields where orange lilies grew,
Upon my lips an ancient Buddhist prayer.

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