Hallowe’en

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It was down in the woodland on last Hallowe'en,
  Where silence and darkness had built them a lair,
  That I felt the dim presence of her, the unseen,
  And heard her still step on the ghost-haunted air.

  It was last Hallowe'en in the glimmer and swoon
  Of mist and of moonlight that thickened and thinned,
  That I saw the gray gleam of her eyes in the moon,
  And hair, like a raven, blown wild in the wind.

  It was last Hallowe'en where starlight and dew
  Made mystical marriage on flower and leaf,
  That she led me with looks of a love that I knew,
  And lured with the voice of a heart-buried grief.

  It was last Hallowe'en in the forest of dreams,
  Where trees are eidolons and shadows have eyes,
  That I saw her pale face like the foam of far streams,
  And heard, like the leaf-lisp, her tears and her sighs.

  It was last Hallowe'en, the haunted, the dread,
  In the wind-tattered wood by the storm-twisted pine,
  That I, who am living, kept tryst with the dead,
  And clasped her a moment and dreamed she was mine.

© Madison Julius Cawein