ilences and wilting bloom;
Life's melody of voices drifts away--
Mistaken!
Was it an owlet in the thorns that moaned?
The churchyard moonlight turns ash-gray--
Hush! Pale Louise!
The dead must not awaken.
Something a twittering cry is uttering.
Is that a bird there on her breast,
Lost in the fragrant gloom,
Wakening to morning twilight in the tomb?
No bird--it is her folded hands a-fluttering!
I think I should have died to see her rise
Among the withered wreaths
And spider-cluttered palls
Of her dead uncles' funerals,
While streams of horror fed the blue lakes of her eyes.
I known I would have died to see her rise.
_Over the fields a voice calls from the tomb,_
_Pleading and pleading drearily,_
_But all the slaves have fled_
_And left her talking to her coffined dead,_
_And whimpering eerily._
_The young birds die_
_To see old hands thrust from the window-slit,_
_Clutching the light in handfuls of despair;_
_Stark fear has stroked the color from her hair,_
_While from the window comes_
_The babbled whisper of her prayer._
_Night is like spiders in her mouth;_
_By day they spin a film across her eyes._
_Now night; now day--_
_The birds come back;_
_It is another year:_
_The withering voice they fear_
_Has nothing more to say._
But yet once more
Her kinsmen came
With nodding plume and pall
And music slow,
And, sobbing low,
They fluttered back the door, and lo!--
She leaned against the slit-window
Her web-like, bony hands against the wall,
And all about her, like a summer cloud
Rippled her leprous hair,
One bleached and shuddering shroud.
H.A.
THE LEAPING POLL
At early morning when the earth grows cold,
When river mists creep up,
And those asleep are nearest death,
She died.
The feather would not flutter in her breath;
And those who long had watched her slipped away,
Too weary then to weep;
They could do that next day--
They left her lonely on the bed,
Under a long, glistening sheet, in feeble tallow-shine,
Rigid from muffled feet to swathed head.
This in old days before the Turkish cure
Had driven out the pox;
Next morning, while slave carpenters
Were hammering at the oblong box,
The sun revived her a
|