The Deadly Nightshade
I
There was a haunt, it does not change,
Not while the fiend its path invades;
But he who did its alleys range
Has willed his penance to its shades.
There still the nightshade breathes its pest
On fallen spirits not at rest.
II
It is the haunt it was of yore,
A den where thieves and harlots creep,
Where Nature's voice is heard no more,
Where guilt-stained men night-vigil keep,
And crimes like months afresh appear, —
Ere one runs out, another near.
III
A haunt where all in common share
The sleepless hour, the murderous toil:
Where Death on all has set his stare,
To drag them forth, to grasp their spoil:
Between their gallows and their den,
A hardening sight for other men.
IV
This is the charnel that doth hide
A frantic woman who at play
Has lost her wealth of virgin pride,
And reckless games her soul away;
Whose scarlet rags, deep-dyed, replace
The blushes of her maiden face.
V
A mother's bitter hour sets in;
Wrecked on her breast the infant lies,
As if to perish for its sin,
There set adrift from human ties
Till its ear-piercing scream prevail
And sullen pity hush the wail.
VI
Where only shadows rise and set,
And love at morn awaketh not,
This child of woe his being met,
To share a loveless parent's lot,
And at his birth his sentence meet
Before a mother's judgment-seat.
VII
The mother moaning in the gloom
Laughed when a peaceful breath he drew,
Too conscious of his early doom.
On wounded wings the tidings flew,
On bosoms pitiless they fell:
" A child of heaven was born in hell!"
VIII
His place of birth the skies deplored,
No trees, no brooks, no meadows seen;
And still his heart those skies adored
Before he saw the fields were green.
Born amid broils, in squalor bred,
His soul knew not to where it sped.
IX
The child is taught through many a blow
To shed with sobs the beggar's tear,
Reared as a prodigy of woe
That gentle women pay to hear.
And many listened and bestowed;
For younger tears had never flowed.
X
Held at his mother's hand, he hung
A broken spray with misery's drip;
And often to the ground he clung,
His passion bursting at his lip.
And still she dragged him o'er the stones,
Though tender was he to the bones.
XI
Her eyes of prey like fangs were laid
On all who gave a hurried look.
And while she whined for kindly aid,
She hid away the coin she took,
When suddenly she begged no more
And rushed within a slamming door.
XII
With nostrils spread, and eyes aflame,
Before the shrine of death she stands,
The infant by her, sick and lame,
The lava trembling in her hands.
She drinks it with a vengeful frown;
She feels the fiend of sorrow drown.
XIII
Now in a prison left to rage,
She thirsts, she burns with vain desire
Her deadly sickness to assuage,
To quench its fiery pang in fire.
With what a mother sent to dwell,
This child of heaven reared up in hell!
XIV
Not far away from infancy —
Through weary time a single stage,
The livelong years had hustled by
But left him still of tender age,
When from his mother's reach he fled,
Outside the doors to make his bed.
XV
Where odours wander, dank and foul,
Through crowded streets and alleys lone,
By day and night his footsteps prowl;
His wants, not many, asked by none:
The roads were new he hourly crossed,
Yet was his way not wholly lost.
XVI
When hunger like a conscience cries,
He asks the needy to bestow,
Afraid to raise his drooping eyes
Except to those who famine know;
Such he believes their crust will break,
And share with him for pity's sake.
XVII
Hopeful, he glides into a den
Up whose dusk path a shudder flew,
And asks of sick, half-famished men
Whose strength no plenty could renew.
Yet with what startling oaths they rave
And bid him run his neck to save!
XVIII
Still to the poor is his appeal,
And they his mild entreaty spurn:
Some whisper, Be a man and steal;
Some bid him to the gallows turn.
Child-like he credits all he hears,
And rests his troubled heart in tears.
XIX
He rests, — but oft starts up in fear;
His mother's driving shadow breaks
Upon his slumber unaware,
And sleep's too light repast awakes
Where dreams the festive board have spread
And turned his sorrow into bread.
XX
Hope, 'mid those shapes of famine sent,
Smiles on him; — she is Childhood's bride!
The mother's image, o'er him bent,
Cannot the angel wholly hide, —
Not when her halo o'er him plays,
And all but hunger's pang allays.
XXI
How did he long for once to taste
Of the forbidden food whose smell
From cellar gratings ran to waste!
Gusts that the passing crowd repel.
As when a rose some maid regales,
The grateful vapour he inhales.
XXII
Less favoured than the dog outside,
He lingers by some savoury mass;
He watches mouths that open wide,
And sees them eating through the glass.
Oft his own lips he opes and shuts,
And sympathy his fancy gluts.
XXIII
So, oft a-hungered has he stood,
And yarn of fasting fancy spun,
As wistfully he watched the food,
With one foot out prepared to run,
In vague misgiving of his right
To revel in the dainty sight.
XXIV
Harmless, yet to the base akin,
He feels a blot no eye could see,
And drags his rags about his skin
To hide from view his pedigree.
He deems himself a thief by birth,
An alien on the teeming earth.
XXV
He begs not, but as in a trance
Admires the gay and wealthy throng;
But if the curious on him glance,
He is abashed and slinks along;
He cares no more, the spell once broke,
Scenes of false plenty to invoke.
XXVI
The man of charity beholds
His vagrant looks with pent-up grief;
He stops, reproves; he gently scolds,
But fails to give the child relief;
" So sad," he says, " to see them thrive
Who on another's earnings live."
XXVII
Then comes the child, this ill-sown seed,
To sweep the purlieus and the wynds,
But few bethink them of his need,
And scanty is the help he finds.
At times he walks upon his head:
A form of prayer for daily bread.
XXVIII
Now seem his days for sorrow made!
He hears that men on Sunday pray;
A world's proud secret on parade
To him appears the Sabbath-day.
All have asked heaven to take their cares,
But hunger says for him his prayers.
XXIX
Some words have reached him such as jar
On sinners' ears and seem devout;
They are but as a light from far,
They come from heaven and soon die out,
Too weak as yet to turn a spell
Wove in the alphabet of hell.
There was a haunt, it does not change,
Not while the fiend its path invades;
But he who did its alleys range
Has willed his penance to its shades.
There still the nightshade breathes its pest
On fallen spirits not at rest.
II
It is the haunt it was of yore,
A den where thieves and harlots creep,
Where Nature's voice is heard no more,
Where guilt-stained men night-vigil keep,
And crimes like months afresh appear, —
Ere one runs out, another near.
III
A haunt where all in common share
The sleepless hour, the murderous toil:
Where Death on all has set his stare,
To drag them forth, to grasp their spoil:
Between their gallows and their den,
A hardening sight for other men.
IV
This is the charnel that doth hide
A frantic woman who at play
Has lost her wealth of virgin pride,
And reckless games her soul away;
Whose scarlet rags, deep-dyed, replace
The blushes of her maiden face.
V
A mother's bitter hour sets in;
Wrecked on her breast the infant lies,
As if to perish for its sin,
There set adrift from human ties
Till its ear-piercing scream prevail
And sullen pity hush the wail.
VI
Where only shadows rise and set,
And love at morn awaketh not,
This child of woe his being met,
To share a loveless parent's lot,
And at his birth his sentence meet
Before a mother's judgment-seat.
VII
The mother moaning in the gloom
Laughed when a peaceful breath he drew,
Too conscious of his early doom.
On wounded wings the tidings flew,
On bosoms pitiless they fell:
" A child of heaven was born in hell!"
VIII
His place of birth the skies deplored,
No trees, no brooks, no meadows seen;
And still his heart those skies adored
Before he saw the fields were green.
Born amid broils, in squalor bred,
His soul knew not to where it sped.
IX
The child is taught through many a blow
To shed with sobs the beggar's tear,
Reared as a prodigy of woe
That gentle women pay to hear.
And many listened and bestowed;
For younger tears had never flowed.
X
Held at his mother's hand, he hung
A broken spray with misery's drip;
And often to the ground he clung,
His passion bursting at his lip.
And still she dragged him o'er the stones,
Though tender was he to the bones.
XI
Her eyes of prey like fangs were laid
On all who gave a hurried look.
And while she whined for kindly aid,
She hid away the coin she took,
When suddenly she begged no more
And rushed within a slamming door.
XII
With nostrils spread, and eyes aflame,
Before the shrine of death she stands,
The infant by her, sick and lame,
The lava trembling in her hands.
She drinks it with a vengeful frown;
She feels the fiend of sorrow drown.
XIII
Now in a prison left to rage,
She thirsts, she burns with vain desire
Her deadly sickness to assuage,
To quench its fiery pang in fire.
With what a mother sent to dwell,
This child of heaven reared up in hell!
XIV
Not far away from infancy —
Through weary time a single stage,
The livelong years had hustled by
But left him still of tender age,
When from his mother's reach he fled,
Outside the doors to make his bed.
XV
Where odours wander, dank and foul,
Through crowded streets and alleys lone,
By day and night his footsteps prowl;
His wants, not many, asked by none:
The roads were new he hourly crossed,
Yet was his way not wholly lost.
XVI
When hunger like a conscience cries,
He asks the needy to bestow,
Afraid to raise his drooping eyes
Except to those who famine know;
Such he believes their crust will break,
And share with him for pity's sake.
XVII
Hopeful, he glides into a den
Up whose dusk path a shudder flew,
And asks of sick, half-famished men
Whose strength no plenty could renew.
Yet with what startling oaths they rave
And bid him run his neck to save!
XVIII
Still to the poor is his appeal,
And they his mild entreaty spurn:
Some whisper, Be a man and steal;
Some bid him to the gallows turn.
Child-like he credits all he hears,
And rests his troubled heart in tears.
XIX
He rests, — but oft starts up in fear;
His mother's driving shadow breaks
Upon his slumber unaware,
And sleep's too light repast awakes
Where dreams the festive board have spread
And turned his sorrow into bread.
XX
Hope, 'mid those shapes of famine sent,
Smiles on him; — she is Childhood's bride!
The mother's image, o'er him bent,
Cannot the angel wholly hide, —
Not when her halo o'er him plays,
And all but hunger's pang allays.
XXI
How did he long for once to taste
Of the forbidden food whose smell
From cellar gratings ran to waste!
Gusts that the passing crowd repel.
As when a rose some maid regales,
The grateful vapour he inhales.
XXII
Less favoured than the dog outside,
He lingers by some savoury mass;
He watches mouths that open wide,
And sees them eating through the glass.
Oft his own lips he opes and shuts,
And sympathy his fancy gluts.
XXIII
So, oft a-hungered has he stood,
And yarn of fasting fancy spun,
As wistfully he watched the food,
With one foot out prepared to run,
In vague misgiving of his right
To revel in the dainty sight.
XXIV
Harmless, yet to the base akin,
He feels a blot no eye could see,
And drags his rags about his skin
To hide from view his pedigree.
He deems himself a thief by birth,
An alien on the teeming earth.
XXV
He begs not, but as in a trance
Admires the gay and wealthy throng;
But if the curious on him glance,
He is abashed and slinks along;
He cares no more, the spell once broke,
Scenes of false plenty to invoke.
XXVI
The man of charity beholds
His vagrant looks with pent-up grief;
He stops, reproves; he gently scolds,
But fails to give the child relief;
" So sad," he says, " to see them thrive
Who on another's earnings live."
XXVII
Then comes the child, this ill-sown seed,
To sweep the purlieus and the wynds,
But few bethink them of his need,
And scanty is the help he finds.
At times he walks upon his head:
A form of prayer for daily bread.
XXVIII
Now seem his days for sorrow made!
He hears that men on Sunday pray;
A world's proud secret on parade
To him appears the Sabbath-day.
All have asked heaven to take their cares,
But hunger says for him his prayers.
XXIX
Some words have reached him such as jar
On sinners' ears and seem devout;
They are but as a light from far,
They come from heaven and soon die out,
Too weak as yet to turn a spell
Wove in the alphabet of hell.
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