Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Watcher by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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The Watcher

    By Ella Wheeler Wilcox



    "I think I hear the sound of horses feet
        Beating upon the gravelled avenue.
    Go to the window that looks on the street,
        He would not let me die alone, I knew."
    Back to the couch the patient watcher passed,
    And said: "It is the wailing of the blast."

    She turned upon her couch and, seeming, slept,
        The long, dark lashes shadowing her cheek;
    And on and on the weary moments crept,
        When suddenly the watcher heard her speak:
    "I think I hear the sound of horses' hoofs - "
    And answered, "'Tis the rain upon the roofs."

    Unbroken silence, quiet, deep, profound.
        The restless sleeper turns: "How dark, how late!
    What is it that I hear - a trampling sound?
        I think there is a horseman at the gate."
    The watcher turns away her eyes tear-blind:
    "It is the shutter beating in the wind."

    The dread hours passed; the patient clock ticked on;
        The weary watcher moved not from her place.
    The grey dim shadows of the early dawn
        Caught sudden glory from the sleeper's face.
    "He comes! my love!    I knew he would!" she cried;
    And, smiling sweetly in her slumbers, died.



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