Page:The Ingoldsby Legends (Frowde, 1905).pdf/90

 'Open lock To the Dead Man's knock! Fly bolt, and bar, and band!— Nor move, nor swerve, Joint, muscle, or nerve, At the spell of the Dead Man's hand! Sleep all who sleep!—Wake all who wake!— But be as the Dead for the Dead Man's sake!'

Now lock, nor bolt, nor bar avails, Not stout oak panel thick-studded with nails. Heavy and harsh the hinges creak, Though they had been oil'd in the course of the week, The door opens wide as wide may be, And there they stand, That murderous band. Lit by the light of the , By one!—by two!—by three!

They have pass'd through the porch, they have pass'd through the hall, Where the Porter sat snoring against the wall; The very snore froze, In his very snub nose, You'd have verily deem'd he had snored his last When the by the side of him pass'd! E'en the little wee mouse, as it ran o'er the mat At the top of its speed to escape from the cat, Though half dead with affright, Pausing in its flight; And the cat that was chasing that little wee thing Lay crouch'd as a statue in act to spring! And now they are there, On the head of the stair, And the long crooked whittle is gleaming and bare. —I really don't think any money would bribe Me the horrible scene that ensued to describe, Or the wild, wild glare Of that old man' eye, His dumb despair, And deep agony.

The kid from the pen, and the lamb from the fold, Unmoved may the blade of the butcher behold; They dream not—ah, happier they!—that the knife, Though uplifted, can menace their innocent life; It falls;—the frail thread of their being is riven, They dread not, suspect not, the blow till 'tis given.— But, oh! what a thing 'tis to see and to know That the bare knife is raised in the had of the foe,