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Tangled
in Stars
Poems
by
Ethelwyn Wetherald
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THE
DESERTED HOUSE
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With sagging door and staring window-place,
And sunken roof, it stands
among its trees,
Befriended by the boughs that interlace
Between it and the light
ghost-footed breeze.
Poor human nest, how desolately torn!
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Yet
in these ragged rooms young children slept,
And on this floor, all broken and forlorn,
The baby with the sunshine
daily crept.
See where some older “Ruth” and “Archie”
stood
And marked their names
a yard space from the ground.
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That
little height where all of sweet and good
Within the narrow plot of
home is found.
Such tiny sleeping rooms, with space for naught
Except a place to dress,
a place to dream,
A book, a little shelf, a good night thought,
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childish treasure brought from field or stream.
Upon this curbstone, picking bit by bit
The grass that grew before
the cottage door,
The blessed baby sat, examining it
As one who ne’er
had seen its like before.
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Here by the window in her willow chair,
The mother sewed and sang
a low refrain.
Are those the patches from her piece-bag there?
Nay, they are leaves that
blew in with the rain! [Page 42]
The leaves blow in, the moss is on the roof,
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The
squirrels bring their treasures from the boughs,
The storm comes, and with dull unhastening hoof,
Into this partial shelter
stray the cows.
Ah, come away! Some woman’s youth lies
here,
Some man’s fair
childhood, dead but wondrous sweet,
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Some
heart this cot has sheltered holds it dear,
And fills it with old loves
and joys complete.
What right have we to pry or speculate?
The sun goes down, the
twilight, like a pall,
Encloseth ruined house and porch and gate,
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tender darkness broodeth over all. [Page
43] |
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