An Epic of Women, and Other Poems by Arthur William Edgar O'Shaughnessy - HTML preview

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A LIFE-TOMB.

 

THE house is haunted and rife

With Her touch behind panel and door

And her footfalls under the floor;

O the house is filled with gloom:

—Is She here dead in my life?

Am I here alive in her tomb?—

 

Ah fain am I still to track

And to walk along the ways

Sown with flowers by her feet;

And to gather, following back,

All the purple nights and days

She slew passing; or, half sweet,

To sit with dull eyes cast

On slowly dying embers

Of things the heart remembers

Right fair in the heart’s past,

—Till tones, that seem to start

From the shadows in the room,

Move round about the heart,

And a love-glow fills the gloom;

And her soul seems to look out

As from dim and distant eyes,

And a shade of lips to pout

With some remnant of her sighs.

 

And often too, in the night,

The flame in famished eyes

Re-kindles an old delight

At some dream-sight of her;

The heart with tremulous stir

Lives a moment and then dies.