Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Under by John Collings Squire, Sir
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Under

    By John Collings Squire, Sir




        In this house, she said, in this high second storey,
        In this room where we sit, above the midnight street,
        There runs a rivulet, narrow but very rapid,
        Under the still floor and your unconscious feet.

        The lamp on the table made a cone of light
        That spread to the base of the walls: above was in gloom.
        I heard her words with surprise; had I worked here so long,
        And never divined that secret of the room?

        "But how," I asked, "does the water climb so high?"
        "I do not know," she said, "but the thing is there;
        Pull up the boards while I go and fetch you a rod."
        She passed, and I heard her creaking descend the stair.

        And I rose and rolled the Turkey carpet back
        From the two broad boards by the north wall she had named,
        And, hearing already the crumple of water, I knelt
        And lifted the first of them up; and the water gleamed,

        Bordered with little frosted heaps of ice,
        And, as she came back with a rod and line that swung,
        I moved the other board; in the yellow light
        The water trickled frostily, slackly along.

        I took the tackle, a stiff black rubber worm,
        That stuck out its pointed tail from a cumbrous hook,
        "But there can't be fishing in water like this," I said.
        And she, with weariness, "There is no ice there.    Look."

        And I stood there, gazing down at a stream in spate,
        Holding the rod in my undecided hand...
        Till it all in a moment grew smooth and still and clear,
        And along its deep bottom of slaty grey sand

        Three scattered little trout, as black as tadpoles,
        Came waggling slowly along the glass-dark lake,
        And I swung my arm to drop my pointing worm in,
        And then I stopped again with a little shake.

        For I heard the thin gnat-like voices of the trout
        My body felt woolly and sick and astray and cold,
        Crying with mockery in them: "You are not allowed
        To take us, you know, under ten years old."

        And the room swam, the calm woman and the yellow lamp,
        The table, and the dim-glistering walls, and the floor,
        And the stream sank away, and all whirled dizzily,
        And I moaned, and the pain at my heart grew more and more.

        And I fainted away, utterly miserable.
        Falling in a place where there was nothing to pass,
        Knowing all sorrows and the mothers and sisters of sorrows,
        And the pain of the darkness before anything ever was.




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