The Indian Raid, by Margaret Elizabeth Sangster

The Indian Raid

Harsh is the call of the wind to my ears,
Here on the marshes;
Shrill are the screams that my aching soul hears..
Under the larches
Shadows are creeping with velvet soft feet--
And in the darkness I hear my heart beat--
Are they advancing or do they retreat?
Here on the marshes.   Thick is the fog that hangs heavy and dead
Over the marshes;
Dull are my eyes, and my feet are like lead,
And my throat parches.
Bright gleams a torch on a body of brown,
Slinking away with a feathery crown;
Down on my knees I am crouching--far down--
Still are the marshes.   Dawn faintly glimmers--a bird note is rising
Shrill on the marshes;
Is it a signal that sounds up, surprising,
Where the surf washes?
Ah! For a mortal to whom I could speak,
If I could whisper a word--or could shriek..
God! They are coming--I hear the steps creak!
Death on the marshes.

poems.one - Margaret Elizabeth Sangster

Margaret Elizabeth Sangster