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1878–1952

The Wraith.

Alfred Browning Stanley Tennyson

A pale wraith stood in the dim grey dawn Beside his old love's bed Wavering like a film of lawn And wrang his hands and said,

“Oh! I have come to make my prayer For I cannot take my rest When I think of the red crown I called your hair And the cold stone in your breast.

“Out of the eyeless hopeless dark The nights that are black and grey Never a moon or faint star-spark Or a lonely glimmer of day.

Oh! my love, I have come, love, From the ebony gates of death For the sake of the red crown I called your hair And the jasmine of your breath.”

But his voice was lost like a mouse's scream In a lonely empty house, And the woman lay in a tender dream Of love and orchard boughs,

Her cheeks were flushed and twice she sighed As she turned upon her bed And she had no thought for the thing that cried Or the utterance of the dead.

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The Wraith. · Alfred Browning Stanley Tennyson · Poetry Cove