ROUND a bright isle, set in a sea of gloom, We sat together, dining, And spoke and laughed even as in better times Though each one knew no other might misdoubt The doom that marched moment by moment nigher, Whose couriers knocked on every heart like death, And changed all things familiar to our sight Into strange shapes and grieving ghosts that wept. The crimson-shaded light Shed in the garden roses of red fire That burned and bloomed on the decorous limes. The hungry night that lay in wait without Made blind, blue eyes against the silver's shining And waked the affrighted candles with its breath Out of their steady sleep, while round the room The shadows crouched and crept. Among the legions of beleaguering fears, Still we sat on and kept them still at bay, A little while, a little longer yet, And wooed the hurrying moments to forget What we remembered well, —Till the hour struck—then desperately we sought And found no further respite—only tears We would not shed, and words we might not say. We needs must know that now the time was come Yet still against the strangling foe we fought, And some of us were brave and some Borrowed a bubble courage nigh to breaking, And he that went, perforce went speedily And stayed not for leave-taking. But even in going, as he would dispel The bitterness of incomplete good-byes, He paused within the circle of dim light, And turned to us a face, lit seemingly Less by the lamp than by his shining eyes. So, in the radiance of his mastered fate, A moment stood our soldier by the gate And laughed his long farewell— Then passed into the silence and the night. |