The Candle-Sweep
By Merlin Pendragon
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In the caverns, dark and deep,
Ye should fear the Candle-Sweep.
Though thou try to lurk and creep,
None evade the spreading seep—
Of darkness black as blackest night;
Where miners mine and fighters fight
The death that is this monster, foul,
That cannae hide beneath the cowl—
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O’ what be and be not real.
Illusions do this beast conceal
A shape unknown to mortal eyes.
For what is seen, be a disguise.
The widow sees her long-lost kin,
The mother, her sweetest thing;
A child, a husband, a lantern light,
To ward away the endless night.
And if thy heart be soft and weak,
Thou shalt fall for visions sweet.
And fall upon thine follyous blade;
Constructions o’ thy mind be made.
Into the jaws of death ye’ll walk,
Unknowing of the thing ye’d baulk
At if ye could but only see:
The Subterranean Horror:
The Candle-Sweep.