Elinor Wylie (Элинор Уайли)

Village Mystery


The woman in the pointed hood 
And cloak blue-gray like a pigeon’s wing, 
Whose orchard climbs to the balsam-wood, 
Has done a cruel thing.

To her back door-step came a ghost, 
A girl who had been ten years dead, 
She stood by the granite hitching-post 
And begged for a piece of bread.

Now why should I, who walk alone, 
Who am ironical and proud, 
Turn, when a woman casts a stone 
At a beggar in a shroud?

I saw the dead girl cringe and whine, 
And cower in the weeping air-- 
But, oh, she was no kin of mine, 
And so I did not care!

Elinor Wylie’s other poems:

  1. Poor Earth
  2. Quarrel
  3. Atavism
  4. The Fairy Goldsmith
  5. The Prinkin’ Leddie

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