MEW, Charlotte
    
      
    
      
    On the Asylum Road
  
    
      
    Theirs is the house whose windows—every pane—
  
Are made of darkly stained or clouded glass:
Sometimes you come upon them in the lane,
The saddest crowd that you will ever pass.
    
      
    But still we merry town or village folk
  
Throw to their scattered stare a kindly grin,
And think no shame to stop and crack a joke
With the incarnate wages of man's sin.
    
      
    None but ourselves in our long gallery we meet.
  
The moor-hen stepping from her reeds with dainty feet,
The hare-bell bowing on his stem,
Dance not with us; their pulses beat
To fainter music; nor do we to them
Make their life sweet.
    
      
    The gayest crowd that they will ever pass
  
Are we to brother-shadows in the lane:
Our windows, too, are clouded glass
To them, yes, every pane!
    
      
    
      
    In Nunhead Cemetery
  
    
      
    It is the clay what makes the earth stick to his spade;
  
He fills in holes like this year after year;
The others have gone; they were tired, and half afraid
But I would rather be standing here;
    
      
    There is nowhere else to go. I have seen this place
  
From the windows of the train that's going past
Against the sky. This is rain on my face -
It was raining here when I saw it last.
    
      
    There is something horrible about a flower;
  
This, broken in my hand, is one of those
He threw it in just now; it will not live another hour;
There are thousands more; you do not miss a rose.
    
      
    …..
    
      
    
      
    We should have stood on the gulls' black cliffs and heard the sea
  
And seen the moon's white track,
I would have called, you would have come to me
And kissed me back.
    
      
    You have never done that: I do not know
  
Why I stood staring at your bed
And heard you, though you spoke so low,
But could not reach your hands, your little head;
There was nothing we could not do, you said,
And you went, and I let you go!
    
      
    Now I will burn you back, I will burn you through,
  
Though I am damned for it we two will lie
And burn, here where the starlings fly
To these white stones from the wet sky - ;
Dear, you will say this is not I -
It would not be you, it would not be you!
    
      
    ….
    
      
    
      
    
      
    Saturday Market
  
    
      
    Bury your heart in some deep green hollow
  
Or hide it up in a kind old tree;
Better still, give it the swallow
When she goes over the sea.
    
      
    In Saturday’s Market there’s eggs a ’plenty
  
And dead-alive ducks with their legs tied down,
Grey old gaffers and boys of twenty—
Girls and the women of the town—
Pitchers and sugar-sticks, ribbons and laces,
Poises and whips and dicky-birds’ seed,
Silver pieces and smiling faces,
In Saturday Market they’ve all they need.
    
      
    What were you showing in Saturday Market
  
That set it grinning from end to end
Girls and gaffers and boys of twenty—?
Cover it close with your shawl, my friend—
Hasten you home with the laugh behind you,
Over the down—, out of sight,
Fasten your door, though no one will find you,
No one will look on a Market night.
    
      
    See, you, the shawl is wet, take out from under
  
The red dead thing—. In the white of the moon
On the flags does it stir again? Well, and no wonder!
Best make an end of it; bury it soon.
If there is blood on the hearth who’ll know it?
Or blood on the stairs,
When a murder is over and done why show it?
In Saturday Market nobody cares.
    
      
    Then lie you straight on your bed for a short, short weeping
  
And still, for a long, long rest,
There’s never a one in the town so sure of sleeping
As you, in the house on the down with a hole in your breast.
    
      
                  Think no more of the swallow,
  
Forget, you, the sea,
Never again remember the deep green hollow
                         Or the top of the kind old tree!
    
      
    
      
    
      
    Rooms  
    
      
    
      
    I remember rooms that have had their part
  
In the steady slowing down of the heart.
The room in Paris, the room at Geneva,
The little damp room with the seaweed smell,
And that ceaseless maddening sound of the tide—
Rooms where for good or for ill—things died.
But there is the room where we (two) lie dead,
Though every morning we seem to wake and might just as well seem to sleep again
As we shall somewhere in the other quieter, dustier bed
         Out there in the sun—in the rain.
    
      
    
      
    
      
    The Farmer's Bride
  
    
      
    Three summer's since I chose a maid,
    
      
    Too young may be - but more's to do
    
      
    At harvest time than bide and woo.
    
      
    When us was wed she turned afraid
    
      
    Of love and me and all things human;
    
      
    Like the shut of a winter's day.
    
      
    Her smile went out, and 'twasn't a woman-
    
      
    More like a little frightened fay.
    
      
    One night, in the fall, she runned away.
    
      
    
      
    "Out 'mong the sheep, her be," they said,
    
      
    Should properly have been abed; 
    
      
    But sure enough she wasn't there
    
      
    Lying awake with her wide brown stare.
    
      
    So over seven-acre field and up-along across the down
    
      
    We chased her, flying like a hare
    
      
    Before our lanterns. To Church-town 
    
      
    All in a shiver and a scare
    
      
    We caught her, fetched her home at last
    
      
    And turned the key upon her fast.
    
      
    
      
    She does the work about the house, 
    
      
    As well as most, but like a mouse:
    
      
    Happy enough to chat and play
    
      
    With birds and rabbits and such as they,
    
      
    So long as men-folk keep away.
    
      
    "Not near, Not near," her eyes beseech
    
      
    When one of us comes within reach.
    
      
    The women say that beasts in stall
    
      
    Look round like children at her call. 
    
      
    I've hardly heard her speak at all.
    
      
    
      
    Shy as a leveret, swift as he,
    
      
    Straight and slight as a young larch tree,
    
      
    Sweet as the first wild violets, she, 
    
      
    To her wild self. But what to me ? 
    
      
    
      
    The short days shorten and the oaks are brown,
    
      
    The blue smoke rises to the low grey sky,
    
      
    One leaf in the still air falls slowly down,
    
      
    A magpie's spotted feathers lie 
    
      
    On the black earth spread white with rime, 
    
      
    The berries redden up to Christmas- time.
    
      
    What's Christmas-time without there be
    
      
    Some other in the house but we.
    
      
    
      
    She sleeps up in the attic there 
    
      
    Alone, poor maid. 'Tis but a stair
    
      
    Betwixt us. Oh! My God! the down,
    
      
    The soft young down of her, the brown,
    
      
    The brown of her - her eyes, her hair ! her hair !
  
    
      
    
      
    The Call
  
    
      
    From our low seat beside the fire
  
Where we have dozed and dreamed and watched the glow
Or raked the ashes, stopping so
We scarcely saw the sun or rain
Above, or looked much higher
Than this same quiet red or burned-out fire.
Tonight we heard a call,
A rattle on the window pane,
A voice on the sharp air,
And felt a breath stirring our hair,
A flame within us: Something swift and tall
Swept in and out and that was all.
Was it a bright or a dark angel? Who can know?
It left no mark upon the snow,
But suddenly it snapped the chain
Unbarred, flung wide the door
Which will not shut again;
And so we cannot sit here any more.
We must arise and go:
The world is cold without
And dark and hedged about
With mystery and enmity and doubt,
But we must go
Though yet we do not know
Who called, or what marks we shall leave upon the snow.