Where mandrakes, crying from the moonless fen,Told how a witch, with gaze of owl or batFound, and each root malevolently fatPulled for her waiting cauldron, on my kenUpstole, escaping to the world of men,A vapor as of some infernal vat;Against the stars it clomb, and caught thereatAs if their bright regard to veil again.Despite the web, methought they saw, appalled,The stealthier weft in which all sound was still ...Then sprang, as if the night found breath anew,A wind whereby the stars were disenthralled ...Far off, I heard the cry of frustrate ill—A witch that wailed above her curdled brew.
THE MEDUSA OF THE SKIES
Haggard as if resurgent from a tomb,The moon uprears her ghastly, shrunken head,Crowned with such light as flares upon the deadFrom pallid skies more death-like than the gloom.Now fall her beams till slope and plain assumeThe whiteness of a land whence life is fled;And shadows that a sepulcher might shedMove livid as the stealthy hands of doom.O'er rigid hills and valleys locked and mute,A pallor steals as of a world made stillWhen Death, that erst had crept, stands absolute—An earth now frozen fast by power of eyesThat malefice and purposed silence fill,The gaze of that Medusa of the skies.
A DEAD CITY
The twilight reigns above the fallen noonWithin an ancient land, whose after-timeLies like a shadow o'er its ruined prime.Like rising mist the night increases soonRound shattered palaces, ere yet the moonOn mute, unsentried walls and turrets climb,And touch with whiteness of sepulchral rimeThe desert where a city's bones are strewn.She comes at last; unburied, thick, they showIn all the hoary nakedness of stone.From out a shadow like the lips of DeathIssues a wind, that through the stillness blown,Cries like a prophet's ghost with wailing breathThe weirds of finished and forgotten woe.