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The Autumn leaves went whispering by,
Like ghosts that never slept.
Up through the dusk a curlew's cry
From glen to hill-top crept.
The Dead Man heard the burn moan by
And thought for him it wept.

Lapped in his grave, a night and day,
The Dead Man marked the sound:
He knew the moon rose far away,
Grey shadows gathered round,
Then down the glen, he heard the bay
Raised by his great grey hound.

A stag crashed out, and thundered back
— She never turned aside.
The swollen stream ran cold and black,
— She leapt the waters wide,
Nor paused, nor left the shadowy track
Till at the dark grave side.

" What brings you here, my great grey hound,
What brings you here, alone?
True I am dead, but is there found
Beneath my board no bone?
No rushy bed for your grey head
Now I am dead and gone? "

" Your brother reads your title-deeds,
Your wife counts out red gold,
And laughs in rich black widow's-weeds,
Red-lipped and smooth and bold.
I want no bone, to gnaw alone,
Now that your hand is cold. "

The Dead Man laughed in scornful hate,
While the great hound growled low,
" Last night I rose to Heaven's gate, "
He said, " for I would know
The best or worst dealt out by Fate,
And whither I must go. "

He paused — " My grave is damp and cold;
I feel the slow worms glide
Smoothly and softly through the mould,
And nestle by my side.
What lives and moves, in wood and wold,
Where love and laughter bide? "

" The wild fowl fly across, and call
In from the grey salt sea;
I scent the red stag by the Fall,
He fears no more from me.
The moon comes up, and over all
She glimmers eerily. "

The corpse replied, " At Heaven's gates
They stand to let me through,
And there, years hence, a welcome waits
False Wife and Brother too.
Do what you will, my hound, and still
Heaven holds no place for you.

" With tooth and claw tear down to me,
And Death shall be no tether.
The swift red deer once more shall flee,
Panting through burn and heather:
And you and I once more shall be
Hunting my hills together! "
. . . . . . . . .

That night the deer across the wold
From dark to dawning fled;
The lady dreamt that, shroud-enrolled,
A corpse had shared her bed;
But by the grave wind-swept and cold,
The great grey hound lay dead!
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