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And the watch-dogs all asleep, And the misty silver radiance Makes the shade look black and deep-- When, so silent is the night, Not a dead leaf dares to fall, And I only hear the death-watch Ticking, ticking in the wall-- When no hidden mouse dares gnaw At the silence dead and dumb, And the very air seems waiting For a Something that should come-- Suddenly, there stands my guest, Whence he came I cannot see; Not a door has swung before him, Not a hand touched latch or key, Not a rustle stirred the air; Yet he stands there, brave and mute, In his eyes a look of greeting, In his hand an old-time flute. Then, with all the courtly grace Of the old Colonial school, From the curtain-shadowed corner Forth he draws a three-legged stool-- (Ah, it was not there before! Search as closely as I may, I can never, never find it When I look for it by day!) Places it beside my bed, And while silently I gaze Spell-bound by his mystic presence, Seats himself thereon and plays. Gracious, stately, grave and tall, Always dressed from crown to toe In the quaint elaborate fashion Of a hundred years ago. Doublet, small-clothes, silk-clocked hose; Wears my midnight melodist, Snowy ruffles in his bosom, Snowy ruffles at his wrist. Silver buckle at his knee, Silver buckle on his shoe; Powdered hair smoothed back and plaited In a stiff old-fashioned queue. If I stir he vanishes; If I speak he flits away; If I lie in utter silence, He will sit for hours and play; Play old wailing minor airs, Melancholy, wild and slow, Such, mayhap, as pleased the maidens Of a hundred years ago. All in vain I wait to hear Ghostly histories of wrong Unconfessed and unforgiven, Unavenged and suffered long; Not a story does he tell, Not a single word he says-- Only sits and gazes at me Steadily, and plays and plays. Who is he, my midnight guest? Wherefore does he haunt me so; Coming from the misty shadows Of a hundred years ago? HAUNTED: AMY LOWELL See! He trails his toes Through the long streaks of moonlight, And the nails of his fingers glitter; They claw and flash among the tree-tops. His lips suck at my open window, And his breath creeps about my body And lies in pools under my knees. I can see his mouth sway and wobble, Sticking itself against the window-jambs, But the moonlight is bright on the floor, Without a shadow. Hark! A
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