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English Roses

by F. Harald Williams [i.e. F. W. O. Ward]

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THE ASTRAL PLANE.

Don't say this is the heavenly land,
The final goal to Man for ever
Of happy thought, and high endeavour
To find a basis where to stand;
Don't tell me, what around environs
My view, is hell-without gridirons,
And all the precious tools to brand.
Too bad for Heaven, too good for hell,
With pleasant sounds if not like Simms' tone;
It has not even the proper smell,
Nor just the faintest breath of brimstone.
It can't be Tophet or Gehenna,
Or (what is worse) our own Vienna;
It can't be Calvin's blissful bound,
Or Hebrew Sheol or Greek Hades—
For I can see no nice old ladies,
Who deemed salvation to be sound.
I'm sorely puzzled at the sight,
And whether under this or that sky
I waver between day and night—
But here (good luck) is the Blavatsky!
“Dear Madam, is it bliss or bane?”
“You d—d fool, it's the Astral Plane.”