Page:Captain Craig; a book of poems.djvu/89

Rh "Now that," said Killigrew, constrainedly, And with a laugh that might have been left out, "Is why I know it must have been a dream. But there he was, and I lay in the bed Like you; and I could see him just as well As you see my right hand. And for the songs He sang to me—there's where the dream part comes."

"You don't remember them?" the Captain said, With a weary little chuckle; "very well, I might have guessed it. Never mind your dream, But let me go to sleep."—For a moment then There was half a frown on Killigrew's good face, But he turned it to a smile.—"Not quite," said he; "The songs that he sang first were sorrowful, And they were stranger than the man himself— And he was very strange; but I found out, Through all the gloom of him and of his music, That a kind of—well, say mystic cheerfulness, Or give it almost any trumped-up name, Pervaded him; for slowly, as he sang, There came a change, and I began to know The method of it all. Song after song Was ended; and when I had listened there For hours—I mean for dream-hours—hearing him,