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 Moonlight by Vita Sackville-West 
						What time the meanest brick and stoneTake on a beauty not their own,
 And past the flaw of builded wood
 Shines the intention whole and good,
 And all the little homes of man
 Rise to a dimmer, nobler span;
 When colour's absence gives escape
 To the deeper spirit of the shape,
 
 -- Then earth's great architecture swells
 Among her mountains and her fells
 Under the moon to amplitude
 Massive and primitive and rude:
 
 -- Then do the clouds like silver flags
 Stream out above the tattered crags,
 And black and silver all the coast
 Marshalls its hunched and rocky host,
 And headlands striding sombrely
 Buttress the land against the sea,
 -- The darkened land, the brightening wave --
 And moonlight slants through Merlin's cave.
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