THE SPECTRE

IN cloudy quiet of the day,

While thrush and robin perched mute on spray,

A spectre by the window sat,

Brooding thereat.

He marked the greenness of the Spring,

Daffodil blowing, bird a-wing—

Yet dark the house the years had made

Within that Shade.

Blinded the rooms wherein no foot falls.

Faded the portraits on the walls.

Reverberating, shakes the air

A river there.

Coursing in flood, its infinite roars;

From pit to pit its water pours;

And he, with countenance unmoved,

Hears cry:—'Beloved,

'Oh, ere the day be utterly spent,

Return, return, from banishment.

The night thick-gathers. Weep a prayer

For the true and fair.'