THE TRYST[1914]

THE TRYST[1914]

I said to the woman: Whence do you come,With your bundle in your hand?She said: In the North I made my home,Where slow streams fatten the fruitful loam,And the endless wheat-fields run like foamTo the edge of the endless sand.I said: What look have your houses there,And the rivers that glass your sky?Do the steeples that call your people to prayerLift fretted fronts to the silver air,And the stones of your streets, are they washed and fairWhen the Sunday folk go by?My house is ill to find, she said,For it has no roof but the sky;The tongue is torn from the steeple-head,The streets are foul with the slime of the dead,And all the rivers run poison-redWith the bodies drifting by.I said: Is there none to come at your callIn all this throng astray?They shot my husband against a wall,And my child (she said), too little to crawl,Held up its hands to catch the ballWhen the gun-muzzle turned its way.I said: There are countries far from hereWhere the friendly church-bells call,And fields where the rivers run cool and clear,And streets where the weary may walk without fear,And a quiet bed, with a green tree near,To sleep at the end of it all.She answered: Your land is too remote,And what if I chanced to roamWhen the bells fly back to the steeples’ throat,And the sky with banners is all afloat,And the streets of my city rock like a boatWith the tramp of her men come home?I shall crouch by the door till the bolt is down,And then go in to my dead.Where my husband fell I will put a stone,And mother a child instead of my own,And stand and laugh on my bare hearth-stoneWhen the King rides by, she said.

I said to the woman: Whence do you come,With your bundle in your hand?She said: In the North I made my home,Where slow streams fatten the fruitful loam,And the endless wheat-fields run like foamTo the edge of the endless sand.I said: What look have your houses there,And the rivers that glass your sky?Do the steeples that call your people to prayerLift fretted fronts to the silver air,And the stones of your streets, are they washed and fairWhen the Sunday folk go by?My house is ill to find, she said,For it has no roof but the sky;The tongue is torn from the steeple-head,The streets are foul with the slime of the dead,And all the rivers run poison-redWith the bodies drifting by.I said: Is there none to come at your callIn all this throng astray?They shot my husband against a wall,And my child (she said), too little to crawl,Held up its hands to catch the ballWhen the gun-muzzle turned its way.I said: There are countries far from hereWhere the friendly church-bells call,And fields where the rivers run cool and clear,And streets where the weary may walk without fear,And a quiet bed, with a green tree near,To sleep at the end of it all.She answered: Your land is too remote,And what if I chanced to roamWhen the bells fly back to the steeples’ throat,And the sky with banners is all afloat,And the streets of my city rock like a boatWith the tramp of her men come home?I shall crouch by the door till the bolt is down,And then go in to my dead.Where my husband fell I will put a stone,And mother a child instead of my own,And stand and laugh on my bare hearth-stoneWhen the King rides by, she said.

I said to the woman: Whence do you come,With your bundle in your hand?She said: In the North I made my home,Where slow streams fatten the fruitful loam,And the endless wheat-fields run like foamTo the edge of the endless sand.

I said to the woman: Whence do you come,

With your bundle in your hand?

She said: In the North I made my home,

Where slow streams fatten the fruitful loam,

And the endless wheat-fields run like foam

To the edge of the endless sand.

I said: What look have your houses there,And the rivers that glass your sky?Do the steeples that call your people to prayerLift fretted fronts to the silver air,And the stones of your streets, are they washed and fairWhen the Sunday folk go by?

I said: What look have your houses there,

And the rivers that glass your sky?

Do the steeples that call your people to prayer

Lift fretted fronts to the silver air,

And the stones of your streets, are they washed and fair

When the Sunday folk go by?

My house is ill to find, she said,For it has no roof but the sky;The tongue is torn from the steeple-head,The streets are foul with the slime of the dead,And all the rivers run poison-redWith the bodies drifting by.

My house is ill to find, she said,

For it has no roof but the sky;

The tongue is torn from the steeple-head,

The streets are foul with the slime of the dead,

And all the rivers run poison-red

With the bodies drifting by.

I said: Is there none to come at your callIn all this throng astray?They shot my husband against a wall,And my child (she said), too little to crawl,Held up its hands to catch the ballWhen the gun-muzzle turned its way.

I said: Is there none to come at your call

In all this throng astray?

They shot my husband against a wall,

And my child (she said), too little to crawl,

Held up its hands to catch the ball

When the gun-muzzle turned its way.

I said: There are countries far from hereWhere the friendly church-bells call,And fields where the rivers run cool and clear,And streets where the weary may walk without fear,And a quiet bed, with a green tree near,To sleep at the end of it all.

I said: There are countries far from here

Where the friendly church-bells call,

And fields where the rivers run cool and clear,

And streets where the weary may walk without fear,

And a quiet bed, with a green tree near,

To sleep at the end of it all.

She answered: Your land is too remote,And what if I chanced to roamWhen the bells fly back to the steeples’ throat,And the sky with banners is all afloat,And the streets of my city rock like a boatWith the tramp of her men come home?

She answered: Your land is too remote,

And what if I chanced to roam

When the bells fly back to the steeples’ throat,

And the sky with banners is all afloat,

And the streets of my city rock like a boat

With the tramp of her men come home?

I shall crouch by the door till the bolt is down,And then go in to my dead.Where my husband fell I will put a stone,And mother a child instead of my own,And stand and laugh on my bare hearth-stoneWhen the King rides by, she said.

I shall crouch by the door till the bolt is down,

And then go in to my dead.

Where my husband fell I will put a stone,

And mother a child instead of my own,

And stand and laugh on my bare hearth-stone

When the King rides by, she said.


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