The blood gushed out amain! For every clot a burning spot Was scorching in my brain! "My head was like an ardent coal, My heart as solid ice; My wretched, wretched soul, I knew, A dozen times I groaned, the dead "And now, from forth the frowning sky, From the heaven's topmost height, I heard a voice, the awful voice Of the blood-avenging sprite : "And I took the dreary body up, "Down went the corse with a hollow plunge, And vanished in the pool; Anon I cleansed my bloody hands, And washed my forehead cool, And sat among the urchins young, That evening in the school. "O Heaven! to think of their white souls, Like a devil of the pit I seemed, And peace went with them, one and all, But Guilt was my grim chamberlain, And drew my midnight curtains round "All night I lay in agony, "All night I lay in agony, From weary chime to chime; "One stern tyrannic thought, that made All other thoughts its slave! Stronger and stronger every pulse "Heavily I rose up, as soon As light was in the sky, And sought the black accurséd pool Merrily rose the lark, and shook But I never marked its morning flight, I never heard it sing; For I was stooping once again "With breathless speed, like a soul in chase, I took him up and ran; There was no time to dig a grave Before the day began, In a lonesome wood, with heaps of leaves, "And all that day I read in school, And a mighty wind had swept the leaves, 66 Then down I cast me on my face, And first began to weep, For I knew my secret then was one Or land or sea, though he should be 66 So wills the fierce avenging sprite, Ay, though he's buried in a cave, "O God! that horrid, horrid dream Besets me now awake! Again, again, with dizzy brain, The human life I take; And my red right hand grows raging hot, Like Cranmer's at the stake. "And still no peace for the restless clay Will wave or mould allow; The horrid thing pursues my soul, That very night, while gentle sleep Two stern-faced men set out from Lynn Through the cold and heavy mist; Malmesbury. Thomas Hood. RESTORATION OF MALMESBURY ABBEY. ONAST and time-consecrated fane! Thou hast put on thy shapely state again, Almost august as in thy early day, Ere ruthless Henry rent thy pomp away. No more the mass on holidays is sung, The Host high raised or fuming censer swung; No more, in amice white, the Fathers slow With lighted tapers in long order go; Yet the tall window lifts its archéd height, As to admit heaven's pale but purer light; Those massy clustered columns, whose long rows, Even at noonday, in shadowy pomp repose Amid the silent sanctity of death, Like giants seem to guard the dust beneath. |