THE THREE OAKS
There are three ancient oaks, That grow near to each other.
They lift their branches High as beckoning With outstretched arms, For some one to come and stand Under the canopy of their leaves.
Once long ago I remember As I lay in the very centre, Between them: A rotten branch suddenly fell Near to me.
I will not go back to those oaks: Their branches are too black for my liking.
AN OAK
h.o.a.r mistletoe Hangs in clumps To the twisted boughs Of this lonely tree.
Beneath its roots I often thought treasure was buried: For the roots had enclosed a circle.
But when I dug beneath them, I could only find great black ants That attacked my hands.
When at night I have the nightmare, I always see the eyes of ants Swarming from a mouldering box of gold.
ANOTHER OAK
Poison ivy crawls at its root, I dare not approach it, It has an air of hate.
One would say a man had been hanged to its branches, It holds them in such a way.
The moon gets tangled in it, A distant steeple seems to bark From its belfry to the sky.
Something that no one ever loved, Is buried here: Some grey shape of deadly hate, Crawls on the back fence just beyond.
Now I remember--once I went Out by night too near this oak, And a red cat suddenly leapt From the dark and clawed my face.
THE OLD BARN
Owls flap in this ancient barn With rotted doors.
Rats squeak in this ancient barn Over the floors.
Owls flap warily every night, Rats" eyes gleam in the cold moonlight.
There is something hidden in this barn, With barred doors.
Something the owls have torn, And the rats scurry with over the floors.
THE WELL
The well is not used now, Its waters are tainted.
I remember there was once a man went down To clean it.
He found it very cold and deep, With a queer niche in one of its sides, From which he hauled forth buckets of bricks and dirt.
THE TREES
When the moonlight strikes the tree-tops, The trees are not the same.
I know they are not the same, Because there is one tree that is missing, And it stood so long by another, That the other, feeling lonely, Now is slowly dying too.
When the moonlight strikes the tree-tops That dead tree comes back; Like a great blue sphere of smoke Half buoyed, half ravelling on the gra.s.s, Rustling through frayed Branches, Something eerily cheeping through it, Something creeping through its shade.
VISION
You who flutter and quiver An instant Just beyond my apprehension; Lady, I will find the white orchid for you, If you will but give me One smile between those wayward drifts of hair.
I will break the wild berries that loop themselves over the marsh-pool, For your sake, And the long green canes that swish against each other, I will break, to set in your hands.
For there is no wonder like to you, You who flutter and quiver An instant Just beyond my apprehension.
EPILOGUE
Why it was I do not know, But last night I vividly dreamed Though a thousand miles away, That I had come back to you.
The windows were the same: The bed, the furniture the same, Only there was a door where empty wall had always been, And someone was trying to enter it.
I heard the grate of a key, An unknown voice apologetically Excused its intrusion just as I awoke.
But I wonder after all If there was some secret entranceway, Some ghost I overlooked, when I was there.