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'Click, click,' his needle hastes, and shrill Cries back the cricket 'neath the sill. Sometimes he stays, and o'er his thread Leans sidelong his old tousled head; Or stoops to peer with half-shut eye When some strange footfall echoes by; Till clearer gleams his candle's spark Into the dusty summer dark. Then from his crosslegs he gets down, To find how dark the evening's grown; And hunched-up in his door he'll hear The cricket whistling crisp and clear; And so beneath the starry grey Will mutter half a seam away. MARTHA 'Once ... once upon a time ...' Over and over again, Martha would tell us her stories, In the hazel glen. Hers were those clear grey eyes You watch, and the story seems Told by their beautifulness Tranquil as dreams. She'd sit with her two slim hands Clasped round her bended knees; While we on our elbows lolled, And stared at ease. Her voice and her narrow chin, Her grave small lovely head, Seemed half the meaning Of the words she said. 'Once ... once upon a time ...' Like a dream you dream in the night, Fairies and gnomes stole out In the leaf-green light. And her beauty far away Would fade, as her voice ran on, Till hazel and summer sun And all were gone:-- All fordone and forgot; And like clouds in the height of the sky, Our hearts stood still in the hush Of an age gone by. THE SLEEPER As Ann came in one summer's day, She felt that she must creep, So silent was the clear cool house, It seemed a house of sleep. And sure, when she pushed open the door, Rapt in the stillness there, Her mother sat, with stooping head, Asleep upon a chair; Fast--fast asleep; her two hands laid Loose-folded on her knee, So that her small unconscious face Looked half unreal to be: So calmly lit with sleep's pale light Each feature was; so fair Her forehead--every trouble was Smooth'd out beneath her hair. But though her mind in dream now moved, Still seemed her gaze to rest From out beneath her fast-sealed lids, Above her moving breast, On Ann, as quite, quite still she stood; Yet slumber lay so deep Even her hands upon her lap Seemed saturate with sleep. And as Ann peeped, a cloudlike dread Stole over her, and then, On stealthy, mouselike feet she trod, And tiptoed out again. THE KEYS OF MORNING While at her bedroom window once, Learning her task for school, Little Louisa lonely sa
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