The Nepean

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  Far down the reach a creeping mist
  Hung dim along the mountain side;
  On shadowed water, sleek and whist,
  I let the lazy shallop glide.

  The ripple scarcely cut the green
  That edged the central path of grey.
  I drew the oars, and, all unseen,
  Gave reverent greeting to the day.

  Naked I stood with arms outspread
  That opened wide the gates of dream;
  Then breathless bent my wondering head
  And sprang to meet the silent stream.

  I slid and floated like a seal,
  And bade my senses revel free,
  From cheek to footsole I could feel
  Her soft cool hands caressing me.

  A noise of tiny wavelets woke,
  I quenched my drouth with delicate sips,
  And, as I drank, the surface broke
  In eager kisses on my lips.

  The scented breath of morning turned
  To incense as toward the west
  At last, rock-altar’d, I discerned
  The sunshine on the mountain crest.

  That light of blessing from the sky
  Made us the fuel of its blaze,
  And fragrant bush and stream and I
  Were one aspiring cry of praise.

© John Le Gay Brereton