WHEN OLD MAN CAREY DIED

A night of wind and driving rain,

No light on land or sky—

The sharp squalls shook the window-pane

And scurried loudly by,

When sped abroad the message stern

On cantering hoofbeats borne

That old man Carey “took a turn,”

And might not see the morn.

What though debarred from Carey’s set,

What though ’twas plainly seen

The new house and its etiquette

Had made a gulf between,

What matter if they passed us by

And scorned us heretofore—

We could not spurn a neighbour’s cry

When trouble found his door.

So through the dark, a swinging light

Beneath the axle tied,

The neighbours braved the stormy night

When old man Carey died.

All blank was Carey’s new brick place

As, entering through the gloom

With noiseless step, we just might trace

Within a darkened room

The purple stole that purifies,

The old wife’s stricken head,

The Carey girls, with swollen eyes,

All kneeling round the bed—

We’d move the world to help them, then:

Our feuds were laid aside,

For all were neighbours once again

When old man Carey died.

And, when he’d paid the debt perforce

That every man must pay,

We came again with hearse and horse

To bear him on his way.

We left behind the new brick place

So strangely silent now,

The death-mask on its staring face,

The ashes on its brow;

Slow straggling down the winding road,

Past ripening crops a-sweep

Which old man Carey’s hands had sowed

But other hands would reap,

With slap and tap of unshod heels

We followed one by one,

And fifty sets of idling wheels

Were twinkling in the sun.

With many a tale of deeds unguessed,

Deeds of the early years,

We brought him to his long, long rest

Among the pioneers.