Part 3 (1/2)
And through the darkness saw--was it the sweep Of some white sea-bird's wing above the foam, That fain would cross those waters, wild and deep, And find its mate and home?
Or was it--oh, dear feet, why should you leave The halls of Heaven, with all their warmth and light, To come where winds wail and where waters grieve, Seeking my door last night?
Surely you came not; 'twas some bird's white breast Flashed through the night, and not your waving hand, Some sea-gull, weary of the waves' unrest, That sought the steadfast land.
And yet, amid the sobbing of the rain, Outside my window in the dark and chill, I heard your voice, that ever and again Called, and would not be still--
Until the morning came, sullen and red, With waves that beat still foaming on the sh.o.r.e, The wind and rain had ceased, and lo! my dead Had gone from me once more.
KITTY'S FEET
Sure, I'm sitting here this evening, while the firelight flickers low, And I'm looking through the shadows into eyes I used to know, Through the years that lie between us, into tender eyes and sweet, And I'm listening in the darkness for the sound of Kitty's feet-- Kitty's feet, whose tripping faltered into silence long ago.
Ah, 'tis well I mind those evenings, gathering shades about my chair, And the sound of Kitty's footsteps dancing gaily down the stair Through the hall and past the doorway, till I'd turn, her eyes to meet, Well my heart it knew the measure that was danced by Kitty's feet-- Kitty's feet that dance no longer, lying in the silence there.
Yet to-night as I sit dreaming, while the shadows longer grow, I can almost think I hear them, the dear steps I long for so; Through the years that lie between us comes again the vision sweet, And my heart once more is beating to the tune of Kitty's feet-- Kitty's feet, that tripped so lightly past Death's portals long ago.
THE PORT O' MISSING s.h.i.+PS
She lies across the western main, Beyond the sunset's rim; Her quays are packed with reeling mists-- A city strange and dim: And silent o'er her harbour bar The ghostly waters brim.
No sound of life is in her streets, No creak of rope or spar Comes ever from the water's edge Where the great vessels are; Yet s.h.i.+p by s.h.i.+p steals through the mists Across her harbour bar.
There many a good galleon Has made her anchor fast, And many a tall caravel Her journeyings ends at last; But no living eye may look upon That harbour dim and vast.
For one went down in tropic seas, And one put fearless forth To find her death in loneliness 'Mid icebergs of the north; Thus s.h.i.+p by s.h.i.+p and crew by crew The ocean tried their worth.
She lies across the western main Beyond the sunset's rim, Her quays are packed with reeling mists-- A city strange and dim; And silent o'er her harbour bar The ghostly waters brim.
THE RIDE OF THE SHADOWS
Behind the pines, when sunset gleams, The white gates of the Land of Dreams Stand open wide, And all adown the golden road That leads from that most blest abode The shadows ride, Who in the light of common day May now no more abide.
They leave their meads of asphodel, The starry s.p.a.ces where they dwell, Where quiet lies: They leave their windless, gla.s.sy sea, The angel songs and melody Of Paradise, To walk again the old-time way Once dear to mortal eyes.
With beating heart I watch them ride Across the gathering shades that hide That country bright; The faces that I loved of yore, Eyes that shall smile on me no more With mortal light; Shadows of all good things and fair Come from the past to-night.
So, when the dying sunset gleams Behind the hills, the Gate of Dreams Stands open wide; And all along the golden road From those fair mansions of their G.o.d Where they abide-- Dear memories of the days that were-- I see the shadows ride.
GHOSTS