oking in.
I couldn't look away from them--the face was white as clay.
Those eyes, they make me shudder when I think of them to-day.
I knew right off 'twas Anderson. I couldn't move nor speak;
I thought I'd slip down on the floor, I felt so light and weak.
"O Lord," I thought, "what shall I do?" Some words begun to come,
Like some one whispered to me: I set there, still and dumb:
"I was a stranger--took me in--in prison--visited me;"
And I says, "O Lord, I couldn't; it's a murderer, you see!"
And those eyes they watched me all the time, in dreadful still
despair--
Most like the room looked warm and safe; he watched me setting
there;
And what 'twas made me do it, I don't know to this day,
But I opened the door and let him in--a murderer at bay.
He laid him right down on the floor, close up beside the fire.
I never saw such a wretched sight: he was covered thick with mire;
His clothes were torn to his very skin, and his hands were bleeding
fast.
I gave him something to tie 'em up, and all my fears were past.
I filled the fire place up with wood to get the creature warm,
And I fetched him a bowl o' milk to drink--I couldn't do him harm;
And pretty soon he says, real low, "Do you know who I be?"
And I says, "You lay there by the fire; I know you won't hurt me."
I had been fierce as any one before I saw him there,
But I pitied him--a ruined man whose life had started fair.
I somehow or 'nother never felt that I was doing wrong,
And I watched him laying there asleep almost the whole night long.
I thought once that I heard the men, and I was half afraid
That they might come and find him there; and so I went and staid
Close to the window, watching, and listening for a cry;
And he slept there like a little child--forgot his misery.
I almost hoped John wouldn't come till he could get away;
And I went to the door and harked awhile, and saw the dawn of day.
'Twas bad for him to have slept so long, but I couldn't make him go
From the City of Refuge he had found; and he was glad, I know.
It was years and years ago, but still I never can forget
How grey it looked that morning; the air was cold and wet;
Only the wind would howl sometimes, or else the trees would creak--
All night I'd 'a given anything to hear somebody speak.
He heard me shut the door again, and started up so wild
And haggard that I 'mos
|