Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Lyrics and Verse Tales. IV. Her DreamEmily H. Hickey (18451924)
F
As against your heart my heart doth beat.
Of the dreadful dream I dreamt last night.
My own love, fair and strong and true.
Played in the light and tost the hay.
Is alive with youth and bright with the sun.
‘The prettiest queen of curds and cream.’
Kiss off the shadow of last night’s pain.
That I was old and that you were dead.
And I well recalled the moan and woe.
You had gone to rest with untired feet;
To lay me down and slumber too.
And I was all alone, alone.
And kissed my face and wept with me;
And smiled grave smiles, and said, ‘Poor lass!’
And my grief-numbed heart would wildly beat;
But never a word of answer came.
To pity pain that was of the past;
And many come home by Weeping Cross.
Sorrow is gone now you are here.
And fled is the horror of yesternight.
My body was bent and my hair was gray.
Sweet tales in the sweet light of the spring,
To say, ‘He is dead and she is old.’
Long since my lover had been brought;
To a level no stranger would have found;
How could I miss it, know it not?
For I cannot shake off the dread and fear.
And kiss me, for, lo, above, beneath,
And the sunshine goes from my lips and eyes.
One of us old, and one of us dead!