The Woman I Met

A stranger, I threaded sunken-hearted

A lamp-lit crowd;

And anon there passed me a soul departed,

Who mutely bowed.

In my far-off youthful years I had met her,

Full-pulsed; but now, no more life’s debtor,

Onward she slid

In a shroud that furs half-hid.

‘Why do you trouble me, dead woman,

Trouble me;

You whom I knew when warm and human?

– How it be

That you quitted earth and are yet upon it

Is, to any who ponder on it,

Past being read!’

‘Still, it is so,’ she said.

‘These were my haunts in my olden sprightly

Hours of breath;

Here I went tempting frail youth nightly

To their death;

But you deemed me chaste – me, a tinselled sinner!

How thought you one with pureness in her

Could pace this street

Eyeing some man to greet?

‘Well; your very simplicity made me love you

Mid such town dross,

Till I set not Heaven itself above you,

Who grew my Cross;

For you’d only nod, despite how I sighed for you;

So you tortured me, who fain would have died for you!

– What I suffered then

Would have paid for the sins of ten!

‘Thus went the days. I feared you despised me

To fling me a nod

Each time, no more: till love chastised me

As with a rod

That a fresh bland boy of no assurance

Should fire me with passion beyond endurance,

While others all

I hated, and loathed their call.

‘I said: “It is his mother’s spirit

Hovering around

To shield him, maybe!” I used to fear it,

As still I found

My beauty left no least impression,

And remnants of pride withheld confession

Of my true trade

By speaking; so I delayed.

‘I said: “Perhaps with a costly flower

He’ll be beguiled.”

I held it, in passing you one late hour,

To your face: you smiled,

Keeping step with the throng; though you did not see there

A single one that rivalled me there! . . .

Well: it’s all past.

I died in the Lock at last.’

So walked the dead and I together

The quick among,

Elbowing our kind of every feather

Slowly and long;

Yea, long and slowly. That a phantom should stalk there

With me seemed nothing strange, and talk there

That winter night

By flaming jets of light.

She showed me Juans who feared their call-time,

Guessing their lot;

She showed me her sort that cursed their fall-time,

And that did not.

Till suddenly murmured she: ‘Now, tell me,

Why asked you never, ere death befell me,

To have my love,

Much as I dreamt thereof?’

I could not answer. And she, well weeting

All in my heart,

Said: ‘God your guardian kept our fleeting

Forms apart!’

Sighing and drawing her furs around her

Over the shroud that tightly bound her,

With wafts as from clay

She turned and thinned away.

London, 1918