Page:The Dial (Volume 76).djvu/619

Rh Before she had spread a book upon her knees And asked about the pictures or the text; And often those first days I saw her stare On old dry writing in a learned tongue, On old dry faggots that could never please The extravagance of spring; or move a hand As if that writing or the figured page Were some dear cheek.

Upon a moonless night I sat where I could watch her sleeping form, And wrote by candle-light; but her form moved, And fearing that my light disturbed her sleep I rose that I might screen it with a cloth. I heard her voice. "Turn that I may expound What's bowed your shoulder and made pale your cheek"; And saw her sitting upright on the bed; Or was it she that spoke or some great Jinn? I say that a Jinn spoke. A live-long hour She seemed the learned man and I the child; Truths without father came, truths that no book Of all the uncounted books that I have read, Nor thought out of her mind or mine begot, Self-born, high-born, and solitary truths, Those terrible implacable straight lines Drawn through the wandering vegetative dream, Even those truths that when my bones are dust Must drive the Arabian host.

The voice grew still, And she lay down upon her bed and slept, But woke at the first gleam of day, rose up And swept the house and sang about her work In childish ignorance of all that passed.

A dozen nights of natural sleep, and then When the full moon swam to its greatest height She rose, and with her eyes shut fast in sleep Walked through the house. Unnoticed and unfelt I wrapped her in a heavy hooded cloak, and she,