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- "Ceste insigne fable et tragicque comedie."--RABELAIS
- THE sun was down, and twilight grey
- Filled half the air; but in the room,
- Whose curtain had been drawn all day,
- The twilight was a dusky gloom:
- Which seemed at first as still as death,
- And void; but was indeed all rife
- With subtle thrills, the pulse and breath
- Of multitudinous lower life.
- In their abrupt and headlong way
- Bewildered flies for light had dashed
- Against the curtain all the day,
- And now slept wintrily abashed;
- And nimble mice slept, wearied out
- With such a double night's uproar;
- But solid beetles crawled about
- The chilly hearth and naked floor.
- And so throughout the twilight hour
- That vaguely murmurous hush and rest
- There brooded; and beneath its power
- Life throbbing held its throbs supprest:
- Until the thin-voiced mirror sighed,
- "I am all blurred with dust and damp,
- So long ago the clear day died,
- So long has gleamed nor fire nor lamp."
- Whereon the curtain murmured back,
- "Some change is on us, good or ill;
- Behind me and before is black
- As when those human things lie still:
- But I have seen the darkness grow
- As grows the daylight every morn;
- Have felt out there long shine and glow,
- In here long chilly dusk forlorn."
- The cupboard grumbled with a groan,
- "Each new day worse starvation brings:
- Since he came here I have not known
- Or sweets or cates or wholesome things:
- But now! a pinch of meal, a crust,
- Throughout the week is all I get.
- I am so empty; it is just
- As when they said we were to let."
- "What is become, then, of our Man?"
- The petulant old glass exclaimed;
- "If all this time he slumber can,
- He really out to be ashamed.
- I wish we had our Girl again,
- So gay and busy, bright and fair:
- The girls are better than these men,
- Who only for their dull selves care.
- "It is so many hours ago--
-  :The lamp and fire were both alight--
- I say him pacing to and fro,
- Perturbing restlessly the night.
- His face was pale to give one fear,
- His eyes when lifted looked too bright;
- He muttered; what, I could not hear:
- Bad words though; something was not right."
- The table said, "He wrote so long
- That I grew weary of his weight;
- The pen kept up a cricket song,
- It ran and ran at such a rate:
- And in the longer pauses he
- With both his folded arms downpressed,
- And stared as one who does not see,
- Or sank his head upon his breast."
- The fire-grate said, "I am as cold
- As if I never had a blaze;
- The few dead cinders here I hold,
- I held unburned for days and days.
- Last night he made them flare; but still
- What good did all his writing do?
- Among my ashes curl and thrill
- Thin ghosts of all those papers too."
- The table answered, "Not quite all;
- He saved and folded up one sheet,
- And sealed it fast, and let it fall;
- And here it lies now white and neat."
- Whereon the letter's whisper came,
- "My writing is closed up too well;
- Outside there's not a single name,
- And who should read me I can't tell."
- The mirror sneered with scornful pride,
- (That ancient crack which spoiled her looks
- Had marred her temper), "Write and write!
- And read those stupid, worn-out books!
- That's all he does, read, write, and read,
- And smoke that nasty pipe which stinks:
- He never takes the slightest heed
- How any of us feels or thinks.
- "But Lucy fifty times a day
- Would come and smile here in my face,
- Adjust a tress that curled astray,
- Or tie a ribbon with more grace.
- She looked so young and fresh and fair,
- She blushed with such a charming bloom,
- It did one good to see her there,
- And brightened all things in the room.
- "She did not sit hours stark and dumb
- As pale as moonshine by the lamp;
- To lie in bed when day was come,
- And leave us curtained chill and damp.
- She slept away the dreary dark,
- And rose to greet the pleasant morn;
- And sang as gaily as a lark
- While busy as the flies sun-born.
- "And how she loved us every one;
- And dusted this and mended that,
- With trills and laughs and freaks of fun,
- And tender scoldings in her chat!
- And then her bird, that sang as shrill
- As she sang sweet; her darling flowers
- That grew there in the window-sill,
- Where she would sit at work for hours.
- "It was not much she ever wrote;
- Her fingers had good work to do;
- Say, once a week a pretty note;
- And very long it took her too.
- And little more she read, I wis;
- Just now and then a pictured sheet,
- Besides those letters she would kiss
- And croon for hours, they were so sweet.
- "She had her friends too, blithe young girls,
- Who whispered, babbled, laughed, caressed,
- And romped and danced with dancing curls,
- And give our life a joyous zest.
- But with this dullard, glum and sour,
- Not one of all his fellow-men
- Has ever passed a social hour;
- We might be in some wild beast's den."
- This long tirade aroused the bed,
- Who spoke in deep and ponderous bass,
- Befitting that calm life he led,
- As if firm-rooted in his place:
- In broad majestic bulk alone,
- As in thrice venerable age,
- He stood at once the royal throne,
- The monarch, the experienced sage:
- "I know what is and what has been;
- Not anything to me comes strange,
- Who in so many years have seen
- And lived through every kind of change.
- I know when men are good or bad,
- When well or ill," he slowly said;
- "When sad or glad, when sane or mad,
- And when they sleep alive or dead."
- At this last word of solemn lore
- A tremor circled through the gloom,
- As if a crash upon the floor
- Had jarred and shaken all the room:
- For nearly all the listening things
- Were old and worn, and knew what curse
- Of violent change death often brings,
- From good to bad, from bad to worse;
- They get to know each other well,
- To feel at home and settled down;
- Death bursts among them like a shell,
- And strews them over all the town.
- The bed went on, "This man who lies
- Upon me now is stark and cold;
- He will not any more arise,
- And do the things he did of old.
- "But we shall have short peace or rest;
- For soon up here will come a rout,
- And nail him in a queer long chest,
- And carry him like luggage out.
- They will be muffled all in black,
- And whisper much, and sigh and weep:
- But he will never more come back,
- And some one else in me must sleep."
- Thereon a little phial shrilled,
- "Here empty on the chair I lie:
- I heard one say, as I was filled,
- 'With half of this a man would die.'
- The man there drank me with slow breath,
- And murmured,'Thus ends barren strife:
- O sweeter, thou cold wine of death,
- Than ever sweet warm wine of life.'"
- "One of my cousins long ago,
- A little thing," the mirror said,
- "Was carried to a couch to show,
- Whether a man was really dead.
- Two great improvements marked the case:
- He did not blur her with his breath,
- His many-wrinkled, twitching face
- Was smooth old ivory: verdict, Death.--"
- It lay, the lowest thing there, lulled
- Sweet-sleep-like in corruption's truce;
- The form whose purpose was annulled,
- While all the other shapes meant use.
- It lay, the he become now it,
- Unconscious of the deep disgrace,
- Unanxious how its parts might flit
- Through what new forms in time and space.
- It lay and preached, as dumb things do,
- More powerfully than tongues can prate;
- Though life be torture through and through,
- Man is but weak to 'plain of fate:
- The drear path crawls on drearier still
- To wounded feet and hopeless breast?
- Well, he can lie down when he will,
- And straight all ends in endless rest.
- And while the black night nothing saw,
- And till the cold morn came at last,
- That old bed held the room in awe
- With tales of its experience vast.
- It thrilled the gloom: it told such tales
- Of human sorrow and delights,
- Of fever moans and infant wails,
- Of births and deaths and bridal nights.
- James Thomson

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