Skip to content
1875–1940

XVII.

Leigh Gordon Giltner

Something... my senses will scarce recall... The horror they came in the night to tell... The mare had galloped riderless home, Blown and bleeding and flecked with foam,

And they found him there by the sunken wall, Hurt to the death by the desperate fall. How it had chanced, he could only tell, Ere the merciful numbness stole his brain;

How the chestnut rose to the leap and fell.... Then his senses closed on the shocks of pain. He spoke, they told me, but once again — To whisper my name with his struggling breath —

( Thank God, he suffered so brief a while ) Then peacefully sank on the breast of Death, Dead, with his lips asmile. How can I wish him alive again,

Lying so peacefully, placidly still, With that carven smile on his marble face. How can I pray that his heart should thrill To waking and waking's pain?

Lying so peacefully, placidly still. With the old, sweet smile on his quiet face, Dead to the sting of a heart's disgrace.... How should I wish him a lesser grace,

How should I strive with a wiser Will? Yet how can the heart that is reft divine Death's mystical, measureless charity? The cry of the stricken king is mine:

“Would I had died for thee!”

Cookies on Poetry Cove

We use cookies to remember your language preference and — only with your consent — to learn how Poetry Cove is used. You can change your mind any time.
XVII. · Leigh Gordon Giltner · Poetry Cove