r twirling feet.
O! in an old unfriendly house,
What shapes may not conceal
Their faces in the open day,
At night abroad to steal?
Even her taper seems with fear
To languish small and blue;
Far in the woods the winter wind
Runs whistling through.
A dreadful cold plucks at each hair,
Her mouth is stretched to cry,
But sudden, with a gush of joy,
It narrows to a sigh.
It is a wilding child which comes
Swift through the corridor,
Singing an old forgotten song,
This ancient burden bore:--
'Thorn, thorn, I wis,
And roses twain,
A red rose and a white,
Stoop in the blossom, bee, and kiss
A lonely child good-night.
'Swim fish, sing bird,
And sigh again,
I that am lost am lone,
Bee in the blossom never stirred
Locks hid beneath a stone!'--
Her eye was of the azure fire
That hovers in wintry flame;
Her raiment wild and yellow as furze
That spouteth out the same;
And in her hand she bore no flower,
But on her head a wreath
Of faded flag-flowers that did yet
Smell sweetly after death.
Clear was the light of loveliness
That lit her face like rain;
And sad the mouth that uttered
Her immemorial strain.
* * * *
Gloomy with night the corridor
Is now that she is gone,
Albeit this solitary child
No longer seems alone.
Fast though her taper dwindles down,
Heavy and thick the tome,
A beauty beyond fear to dim
Haunts now her alien home.
Ghosts in the world malignant, grim,
Vex many a wood, and glen,
And house, and pool,--the unquiet ghosts
Of dead and restless men.
But in her grannie's house this spirit--
A child as lone as she--
Pining for love not found on earth,
Ann dreams again to see.
Seated upon her tapestry-stool,
Her fairy-book laid by,
She gazes in the fire, knowing
She hath sweet company.
THE MILLER AND HIS SON
A twangling harp for Mary,
A silvery flute for John,
And now we'll play the livelong day,
'The Miller and his Son.'
'The Miller went a-walking
All in the forest high,
He sees three doves a-flitting
Against the dark blue sky:
'Says he, "My son, now follow
These doves so white and free,
T
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