The Phantom Kiss

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One night in my room, still and beamless,
  With will and with thought in eclipse,
  I rested in sleep that was dreamless;
  When softly there fell on my lips

  A touch, as of lips that were pressing
  Mine own with the message of bliss--
  A sudden, soft, fleeting caressing,
  A breath like a maiden's first kiss.

  I woke-and the scoffer may doubt me--
  I peered in surprise through the gloom;
  But nothing and none were about me,
  And I was alone in my room.

  Perhaps 't was the wind that caressed me
  And touched me with dew-laden breath;
  Or, maybe, close-sweeping, there passed me
  The low-winging Angel of Death.

  Some sceptic may choose to disdain it,
  Or one feign to read it aright;
  Or wisdom may seek to explain it--
  This mystical kiss in the night.

  But rather let fancy thus clear it:
  That, thinking of me here alone,
  The miles were made naught, and, in spirit,
  Thy lips, love, were laid on mine own.

© Paul Laurence Dunbar