Are those her feet at last upon the stair?
Her trailing garments echoing there?
The falling of her hair?

About a year ago I heard her come,
Thus; as a child recalling some

Vague memories of home.

O how the firelight blinded her dear eyes!
I saw them open, and grow wise:
No questions, no replies. [page 9]

And now, tonight, comes the same sound of rain.


The wet boughs reach against the pane
In the same way, again.

In the old way I hear the moaning wind
Hunt the dead leaves it cannot find,—
Blind as the stars are blind.


—She may come in at midnight, tired and wan.
Yet,—what if once again at dawn
I was to find her gone?

More verses by Francis Joseph Sherman