OUT upon the bleak hillside, the bleak hillside, he lay–
Her lips were red, and red the stream that slipped his life away.
Ah, crimson, crimson were her lips, but his were turning gray.
The troubled sky seemed bending low, bending low to hide
The foam-white face so wild upturned from off the bleak hillside–
White as the beaten foam her face, and she was wond’rous eyed.
The soft, south-wind came creeping up, creeping stealthily
To breathe upon his clay-cold face–but all too cold was he,
Too cold for you to warm, south-wind, since cold at heart was she!
Sweet morning peeped above the hill, above the hill to find
The shattered, useless, godlike thing the night had left behind–
Wept the sweet morn her crystal tears that love should prove unkind!
(Isabel Ecclestone Mackay)
More Poetry from Isabel Ecclestone Mackay:
Isabel Ecclestone Mackay Poems based on Topics: Love, Night, Faces- The Passing Of Cadieux (Isabel Ecclestone Mackay Poems)
- Marguerite de Roberval (Isabel Ecclestone Mackay Poems)
- Calgary Station (Isabel Ecclestone Mackay Poems)
- Joseph (Isabel Ecclestone Mackay Poems)
- The Reasons (Isabel Ecclestone Mackay Poems)
- The Gatekeeper (Isabel Ecclestone Mackay Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Love Poems, Night Poems, Faces PoemsBased on Keywords: clay-cold, foam-white, face-but