Themes and Variations/At Home

For other versions of this work, see At Home (Wilson).

AT HOME.

High in her little rose-clad room
Niched in the winding stair,
My lady sits and looks abroad
On the wind’s thoraughfare.

The roof is tined with cedar wood,
The panels golden pine,
The lattice set with lozenges,
And hung with crimson fine.

The pear-tree wraps her oriel;
Musk fills the window frame;
Her paroquet sits in the ring,
And twitters out her name.

The circling landscape underneath
Glows through its misty veil;
The thunder-cloud against the wind
Beats up, a blackening sail.

The sea, that shone like silver scales,
Fades, tarnished by its breath;
The shaking poplar turns her face
As in a wind of death.

Still half the fields return the sun,
Still laughs the running wheat:
The bird sings on,—one sheet of fame!
And now the thunders meet.

But up within the turret-room
How still it is, how warm!
Shut, like the water-lily’s cup
That closes in the storm.

A kitten coiled upon the chair,
A half-wrought broidery,
Books on the wall—and passing dreams,
Perchance a dream of me!

You hear no knock, no creaking door,
No foot upon the stair,
But love has stolen the key of thought,
Before you know he’s there.