Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Eve Of All-Saints. by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Eve Of All-Saints.

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    1.

    This is the tale they tell,
    Of an Hallowe'en;
    This is the thing that befell
    Me and the village Belle,
    Beautiful Aimee Dean.


    2.

    Did I love her? God and she,
    They know and I!
    And love was the life of me
    Whatever else may be,
    Would God that I could die!


    3.

    That All-Saints' eve was dim;
    The frost lay white
    Under strange stars and a slim
    Moon in the graveyard grim,
    An Autumn ghost of light.


    4.

    They told her: "Go alone,
    With never a word,
    To the burial plot's unknown
    Grave with the grayest stone,
    When the clock on twelve is heard;


    5.

    "Three times around it pass,
    With never a sound;
    Each time a wisp of grass
    And myrtle pluck, and pass
    Out of the ghostly ground;


    6.

    "And the bridegroom that's to be
    At smiling wait,
    With a face like mist to see,
    With graceful gallantry
    Will bow you to the gate."


    7.

    She laughed at this, and so
    Bespoke us how
    To the burial place she'd go:
    And I was glad to know,
    For I'd be there to bow.


    8.

    An acre from the farm
    The homestead graves
    Lay walled from sun and storm;
    Old cedars of priestly form
    Around like sentinel slaves.


    9.

    I loved, but never could say
    Such words to her,
    And waited from day to day,
    Nursing the hope that lay
    Under the doubts that were.


    10.

    She passed 'neath the iron arch
    Of the legended ground,
    And the moon like a twisted torch
    Burned over one lonesome larch;
    She passed with never a sound.


    11.

    Three times had the circle traced,
    Three times had bent
    To the grave that the myrtle graced;
    Three times, then softly faced
    Homeward, and slowly went.


    12.

    Had the moonlight changed me so?
    Or fear undone
    Her stepping strange and slow?
    Did she see and did not know?
    Or loved she another one?


    13.

    Who knows? She turned to flee
    With a face so white
    That it haunts and will haunt me;
    The wind blew gustily,
    The graveyard gate clanged tight.


    14.

    Did she think it me or, what,
    Clutching her dress?
    Her face so pinched that not
    A star in a stormy spot
    Shows half as much distress.


    15.

    Did I speak? did she answer aught?
    O God! had I said
    "Aimee, 't is I!" but naught!
    And the mist and the moon distraught
    Stared with me on her, dead....


    16.

    This is the tale they tell
    Of the Hallowe'en;
    This is the thing that befell
    Me and the village Belle,
    Beautiful Aimee Dean.



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