Stories in Verse. Henry Abbey

Stories in Verse - Henry Abbey


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Love has its night as well as day.

       She passed me by.

       MIND WITHOUT SOUL.

       Table of Contents

      Some strange story I have read

       Of a man without a soul.

       Mind he had, though soul had fled;

       Magic gave him gifts instead,

       And the form of youth he stole.

      Grows a rose-azalea white,

       In my garden, near the way.

       I who see it with delight,

       Dream its soul of odor might,

       In the past, have fled away.

      Blanche (O, sweet, you are so fair,

       So sweet, so fair, whate'er you do),

       Twine no azalea in your hair,

       Lest I think in my despair,

       Heart and soul have left you too.

       A BROKEN SWORD.

       Table of Contents

      Deep in the night I saw the sea,

       And overhead, the round moon white;

       Its steel cold gleam lay on the lea,

       And seemed my sword of life and light,

       Broke in that war death waged with me.

      I heard the dip of golden oars;

       Twelve angels stranded in a boat;

       We sailed away for other shores;

       Though but an hour we were afloat,

       We harbored under heavenly doors.

      O, Blanche, if I had run my race,

       And if I wore my winding sheet,

       And mourners went about the place,

       Would you so much as cross the street,

       To kiss in death my white, cold face?

       A CHANCE FOR GAIN.

       Table of Contents

      I met him in the busy mart;

       His eyes are large, his lips are firm,

       And on his temples, care or sin

       Has left its claw prints hardened in;

       His step is nervous and infirm;

       I wondered if he had a heart.

      He blandly smiled and took my hand.

       He owed me such a debt, he thought,

       He felt he never could repay;

       Yet should I call on him that day,

       He'd hand me what the papers brought,

       For which I once had made demand.

      Then added, turning grave from gay;

       "But you must promise, if I give,

       Your lover's office to resign,

       And stand no more 'twixt me and mine."

       His words were water in a sieve.

       I turned my back and strode away.

       THE LIGHT-HOUSE.

       Table of Contents

      At twilight, past the fountain,

       I wandered in the park,

       And saw a closed white lily

       Sway on the liquid dark;

       And a fire-fly, perched upon it,

       Shone out its fitful spark.

      I fancied it a light-house

       Mooned on a sky-like sea,

       To warn the fearless sailors

       Of lurking treachery—

       Of unseen reefs and shallows

       That starved for wrecks to be.

      O Blanche, O love that spurns me,

       'Tis but a cheat thou art.

       I would some friendly light-house

       Had warned me to depart

       From the secret reefs and shallows

       That hide about your heart.

       DARKNESS.

       Table of Contents

      My hopes and my ambition all were down,

       Like grass the mower turneth from its place;

       The night's thick darkness was an angry frown,

       And earth a tear upon the cheek of space.

      The mighty fiend of storm in wild unrest,

       By lightning stabbed, dragged slowly up the plain;

       Great clots of light, like blood, dripped down his breast,

       And from his open jaws fell foam in rain.

       IN THE CHURCH-YARD.

       Table of Contents

      Where the sun shineth,

       Through the willow trees,

       And the church standeth,

       'Mid the tomb-stones white,

       Planting anemones

       I saw my delight.

      Her mother sleepeth

       Beneath the green mound;

       A white cross standeth

       To show man the place.

       Now close to the ground

       Blanche bendeth her face.

      She quickly riseth

       As she hears my walk,

       And sadly smileth

       Through mists of tears;

       We mournfully talk

       Of departed years.

      She downward droopeth

       Her beautiful head,

       And a blue-bell seemeth

       That blossometh down;

       Trembling with dread,

       Lest the sky should frown.

      She dearer seemeth

       Than ever before.

       She gently chideth

       My more distant way.

      


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