"'Where is the stream?' cried he, with tears. 'Seest thou

its not in blue waves above us?' He looked up, and lo! the

blue stream was flowing gently over their heads."

--NOVALIS, Heinrich von Ofterdingen.

While these strange events were passing through my mind, I suddenly, as

one awakes to the consciousness that the sea has been moaning by him for

hours, or that the storm has been howling about his window all night,

became aware of the sound of running water near me; and, looking out of

bed, I saw that a large green marble basin, in which I was wont to wash,

and which stood on a low pedestal of the same material in a corner of

my room, was overflowing like a spring; and that a stream of clear water

was running over the carpet, all the length of the room, finding its

outlet I knew not where.

And, stranger still, where this carpet, which

I had myself designed to imitate a field of grass and daisies, bordered

the course of the little stream, the grass-blades and daisies seemed to

wave in a tiny breeze that followed the water's flow; while under the

rivulet they bent and swayed with every motion of the changeful current,

as if they were about to dissolve with it, and, forsaking their fixed

form, become fluent as the waters.

My dressing-table was an old-fashioned piece of furniture of black

oak, with drawers all down the front. These were elaborately carved

in foliage, of which ivy formed the chief part. The nearer end of this

table remained just as it had been, but on the further end a singular

change had commenced. I happened to fix my eye on a little cluster of

ivy-leaves. The first of these was evidently the work of the carver; the

next looked curious; the third was unmistakable ivy; and just beyond it

a tendril of clematis had twined itself about the gilt handle of one of

the drawers.

Hearing next a slight motion above me, I looked up, and saw

that the branches and leaves designed upon the curtains of my bed were

slightly in motion. Not knowing what change might follow next, I thought

it high time to get up; and, springing from the bed, my bare feet

alighted upon a cool green sward; and although I dressed in all haste,

I found myself completing my toilet under the boughs of a great

tree, whose top waved in the golden stream of the sunrise with many

interchanging lights, and with shadows of leaf and branch gliding over

leaf and branch, as the cool morning wind swung it to and fro, like a

sinking sea-wave.




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