The Old House

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Quaint and forgotten, by an unused road,
  An old house stands: around its doors the dense
  Blue iron-weeds grow high;
  The chipmunks make a highway of its fence;
  And on its sunken flagstones slug and toad
  Silent as lichens lie.

  The timid snake upon its hearth's cool sand
  Sleeps undisturbed; the squirrel haunts its roof;
  And in the clapboard sides
  Of closets, dim with many a spider woof,
  Like the uncertain tapping of a hand,
  The beetle-borer hides.

  Above its lintel, under mossy eaves,
  The mud-wasps build their cells; and in the floor
  Of its neglected porch
  The black bees nest. Through each deserted door,
  Vague as a phantom's footsteps, steal the leaves,
  And dropped cones of the larch.

  But come with me when sunset's magic old
  Transforms the ruin of that ancient house;
  When windows, one by one,--
  Like age's eyes, that youth's love-dreams arouse,--
  Grow lairs of fire; and glad mouths of gold
  Its wide doors, in the sun.

  Or let us wait until each rain-stained room
  Is carpeted with moonlight, pattened oft
  With the deep boughs o'erhead;
  And through the house the wind goes rustling soft,
  As might the ghost--a whisper of perfume--
  Of some sweet girl long dead.

© Madison Julius Cawein