One Who Comes at Eventide

I think when I am old a furtive shape Will sit beside me at my fireless hearth, Dabbled with blood from stumps of severed wrists, And flacked with blackened bits of mouldy earth.

My blood ran fire when the deed was done; Now it runs colder than the moon that shone On shattered fields where dead men lay in heaps Who could not hear a ravished daughter's moan.

(Dim through the bloody dawn on bitter winds The throbbing of the distant guns was brought When I reeled like a drunkard from the hut That hid the horror my red hands had wrought.)

So now I fire my veins with stinging wine, And hoard my youth as misers hug their gold, Because I know what shape will come and sit Beside my crumbling hearth - when I am old.