I
Not till the wildman wind is shrill,
Howling upon the hill
In every wolfish tree, whose boisterous
boughs,
Like desperate arms, gesture and beat
the night,
And down huge clouds, in chasms of stormy
white
The frightened moon hurries above the
house,
Shall I lie down; and, deep,-
Letting the mad wind keep
Its shouting revel round me,-fall
asleep.
II
Not till its dark halloo is hushed,
And where wild waters rushed,-
Like some hoofed terror underneath its
whip
And spur of foam,-remains
A ghostly glass, hill-framed; whereover
stains
Of moony mists and rains,
And stealthy starbeams, like vague specters,
slip;
Shall I-with thoughts that
take
Unto themselves the ache
Of silence as a sound-from
sleep awake.