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Poem by Madison Julius Cawein Night and Rain The night has set her outposts there Of wind and rain; And to and fro, with ragged hair, At intervals they search the pane. The fir-trees, creepers redly climb, That seem to bleed, Like old conspirators in crime, Drip, whispering of some desperate deed. 'Tis as if wild skirts, flying fast, Besieged the house; The wittol grass, bent to the blast, Whines as if witches held carouse. And now dark feet steal to the door And tap and tip, Shuffle, and then go on once more The eaves keep a persistent drip. And then a skurry, and a bound; Wild feet again? A wind-wrenched tree that to the ground Sweeps instantly its weight of rain. What is it, finger on its lip, That up and down Treads, with dark raiment all a-drip, Trailing a tattered leaf of gown? "O father, I am frightened! See! There, at the pane!" "Hush! hush! my child, 'tis but a tree That tosses in the wind and rain." A rumble, as it were, of hoofs, And hollow call: "O father, what rolls on the roofs, That sounds like some dark funeral?" "Hush! hush! my child; it is the storm The autumn wind." "But, father, see! what is that form? There! wild against the window-blind." "It is the firelight in the room." The father sighed. And then the child:"'Twas dark as doom, And had the face of her who died." Madison Julius Cawein Madison Julius Cawein's other poems: 1199 Views |
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