Bliss Carman.
1861-1929
HERE by the grey north sea, In the wintry heart of the wild, Comes the old dream of thee, Guendolen,
mistress and child.
The heart of the forest grieves In the drift against my door; A voice is under the eaves, A footfall
on the floor.
Threshold, mirror, and hall, Vacant and strangely aware, Wait for their souls recall With the
dumb expectant air.
Here when the smouldering west Burns down into the sea, I take no heed of rest And keep the
watch for thee.
I sit by the fire and hear The restless wind go by, On the long dirge and drear, Under the low
bleak sky.
When day puts out to sea And night makes in for land, There is no lock for thee, Each door
awaits thy hand!
When the zenith moon is round, And snow-wraiths gather and run, And there is set no bound To
love beneath the sun,
O wayward will, come near The old mad wilful way, The soft mouth at my ear With words too
sweet to say!
Come, for the night is cold, The ghostly moonlight fills Hollow and rift and fold Of the eerie
Ardise hills!
The windows of my room Are dark with bitter frost, The stillness aches with doom Of something
loved and lost.
Outside, the great blue star Burns in the ghostland pale, Where giant Algebar Holds on the
endless trail.
Come, for the years are long And silence keeps the door, Where shapes with the shadows
throng The firelit chamber floor.
Come, for thy kiss was warm, With the red embers glare Across thy folding arm And dark
tumultuous hair!
And though thy coming rouse The sleep-cry of no bird, The keepers of the house Shall tremble
at thy word.
Come, for the soul is free! In all the vast dreamland There is no lock for thee, Each door awaits
thy hand.
Ah, not in dreams at all, Fleering, perishing, dim, But thy old self, supple and tall, Mistress and
child of whim!
The proud imperious guise, Impetuous and serene, The sad mysterious eyes, And dignity of
mien!
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By PanEris
using Melati.
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