The Haunted Room

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Its casements' diamond disks of glass
  Stare myriad on a terrace old,
  Where urns, unkempt with ragged grass,
  Foam o'er with frothy cold.
  The snow rounds o'er each stair of stone;
  The frozen fount is hooped with pearl;
  Down desolate walks, like phantoms lone,
  Thin, powd'ry snow-wreaths whirl.

  And to each rose-tree's stem that bends
  With silver snow-combs, glued with frost,
  It seems each summer rosebud sends
  Its airy, scentless ghost.
  The stiff Elizabethan pile
  Chatters with cold thro' all its panes,
  And rumbling down each chimney file
  The mad wind shakes his reins.

  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

  Lone in the Northern angle, dim
  With immemorial dust, it lay,
  Where each gaunt casement's stony rim
  Stared lidless to the day.
  Drear in the Northern angle, hung
  With olden arras dusky, where
  Tall, shadowy Tristrams fought and sung
  For shadowy Isolds fair.

  Lies by a dingy cabinet
  A tarnished lute upon the floor;
  A talon-footed chair is set
  Grotesquely by the door.
  A carven, testered bedstead stands
  With rusty silks draped all about;
  And like a moon in murky lands
  A mirror glitters out.

  Dark in the Northern angle, where
  In musty arras eats and clings
  The drowsy moth; and frightened there
  The wild wind sighs and sings
  Adown the roomy flue and takes
  And swings the ghostly mirror till
  It shrieks and creaks, then pulls and shakes
  The curtains with a will.

  A starving mouse forever gnaws
  Behind a polished panel dark,
  And 'long the floor its shadow draws
  A poplar in the park.
  I have been there when blades of light
  Stabbed each dull, stained, and dusty pane;
  I have been there at dead of night,
  But never will again....

  She grew upon my vision as
  Heat sucked from the dry summer sod;
  In taffetas as green as grass
  Silent and faint she trod;
  And angry jewels winked and frowned
  In serpent coils on neck and wrist,
  And 'round her dainty waist was wound
  A zone of silver mist.

  And icy fair as some bleak land
  Her pale, still face stormed o'er with night
  Of raven tresses, and her hand
  Was beautiful and white.
  Before the ebon mirror old
  Full tearfully she made her moan,
  And then a cock crew far and cold;
  I looked and she was gone.

  As if had come a sullying breath
  And from the limpid mirror passed,
  Her presence past, like some near death
  Leaving my blood aghast.
  Tho' I've been there when blades of light
  Stabbed each dull, stained, and dusty pane;
  Tho' I've been there at dead of night,
  I never will again.

© Madison Julius Cawein