#Spooktober 17: The Poor Ghost
“Oh whence do you come, my dear friend, to me, With your golden hair all fallen below your knee, And your face as white as snowdrops on the lea, And your voice as hollow as the hollow sea? “From the other world I come back to you, My locks are uncurled with dripping drenching dew. […]
With your golden hair all fallen below your knee,
And your face as white as snowdrops on the lea,
And your voice as hollow as the hollow sea?
My locks are uncurled with dripping drenching dew.
You know the old, whilst I know the new:
But to-morrow you shall know this too.”
Oh not to-morrow, too soon to go away
Here I feel warm and well-content and gay:
Give me another year, another day.”
That mine own only love shrinks from me with fright,
Is fain to turn away to left or right
And cover up his eyes from the sight?”
I loved you for life, but life has an end;
Through sickness I was ready to tend:
But death mars all, which we cannot mend.
If you will stay where your bed is set,
Where I have planted a violet
Which the wind waves, which the dew makes wet.”
It was a reed that I leant upon:
Never doubt I will leave you alone
And not wake you rattling bone with bone.
Dug deep at the foot and deep at the head,
Roofed in with a load of lead,
Warm enough for the forgotten dead.
And why did your sobs wake me where I lay?
I was away, far enough away:
Let me sleep now till the Judgment Day.”
Christina Rossetti wrote “The Poor Ghost” in 1859.