The Mirror

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An antique mirror this,
  I like it not at all,
  In this lonely room where the goblin gloom
  Scowls from the arrased wall.

  A mystic mirror framed
  In ebon, wildly carved;
  And the prisoned air in the crevice there
  Moans like a man that's starved.

  A truthful mirror where,
  In the broad, chaste light of day,
  From the window's arches, like fairy torches,
  Red roses swing and sway.

  They blush and bow and gaze,
  Proud beauties desolate,
  In their tresses cold the sunlight's gold,
  In their hearts a jealous hate.

  A small green worm that gnaws,
  For the nightingale that low
  Each eve doth rave, the passionate slave
  Of the wild white rose below.

  The night-bird wails below;
  The stars creep out above;
  And the roses soon in the sultry moon
  Shall palpitate with love.

  The night-bird sobs below;
  The roses blow and bloom;
  Thro' the diamond panes the moonlight rains
  In the dim unholy room.

  Ancestors grim that stare
  Stiff, starched, and haughty down
  From the oaken wall of the noble hall
  Put on a sterner frown.

  The old, bleak castle clock
  Booms midnight overhead,
  And the rose is wan and the bird is gone
  When walk the shrouded dead.

  And grim ancestors gaunt
  In smiles and tears faint flit;
  By the mirror there they stand and stare,
  And weep and sigh to it.

  In rare, rich ermine earls
  With rapiers jeweled rare,
  With a powdered throng of courtiers long
  Pass with stiff and stately air.

  With diamonds and perfumes
  In ruff and golden lace,
  Tall ladies pass by the looking-glass,
  Each sighing at her face.

  An awful mirror this,
  I like it not at all,
  In this lonely room where the goblin gloom
  Scowls from the arrased wall.

© Madison Julius Cawein