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bells began their chime!) She sank to a seat like a coughing bundle of mist Exhaled from the river-slime. _Bells for the birth of Christ!_ She heard, and she thought-- Vacantly--of her man, that was long since dead, The smell of the Christmas food, and the drink they had bought Together, the year they were wed. She thought of their one-room home, and the night-long sigh Recalled, as he slept, of his breath in her loosened hair. _He slept._ She opened her haggard eyes with a cry. But only the night was there. Nay, out of the formless night, at her furtive glance, Crouched at the end of her cold wet bench, there grew A bundle of fog, a bundle of rags that, perchance, Once was a woman, too. A huddled shape, a fungus of foul grey mist Spawned of the river, in peace and much good-will, And even the woman whose lips had once been kissed Wondered, it crouched so still. No breath, no shadow of breath in the lamp-light smoked, It crouched so still--that bunch at the bench's end. She stretched her neck like a crow, then leaned and croaked, "_A Merry Christmas, friend!_" She rose, and peered, peered at its vacant eyes. Touched its cold claws. Its arms of knotted bone Were wands of ice; like iron rods the thighs; The left breast--like a stone. _Far, far along the rows of warmth and light The Christmas waits, with cornet and bassoon, Carolled "While shepherds watched their flocks by night." The bells pealed to the moon._ A bundle of rags and bones, a bundle of mist, And never a hell or heaven to hear or see, The woman, the woman whose lips had once been kissed, Knelt down feverishly. She plucked the shawl out of that frozen clutch. The dead are dead. Why should the living freeze? She touched the cold flesh that she feared to touch Kneeling upon her knees. Her palsied hands unlaced the shoes--good shoes!-- She tore them quick from the crooked yellow feet. If Death be generous, why should Life refuse To take, and pawn, and eat? A heavy step drew nearer thro' the mist. She bundled them into the shawl. Her eyes were bright. The woman, the woman whose lips had once been kissed, Slunk, chuckling, thro' the night. THE IRON CROWN Not memory of a vanished bliss, But suddenly to know, I had forgotten! This, O this With iron crowned my woe: To kn
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