HARLEQUIN

By John Collings Squire

Moonlit woodland, veils of green,

Caves of empty dark between;

Veils of green from rounded arms

Drooping, that the moonlight charms.

Tranced the trees, grass beneath

Silent....

Like a stealthy breath,

Mask and wand and silver skin,

Sudden enters Harlequin.

Hist! Hist! Watch him go,

Leaping limb and pointing toe,

Slender arms that float and flow,

Curving wand above, below;

Flying, gliding, changing feet;

Onset fading in retreat.

Not a shadow of sound there is

But his motion's gentle hiss,

Till one fluent arm and hand

Suddenly circles, and the wand

Taps a bough far overhead,

“Crack,” and then all noise is dead.

For he halts, and a space

Stands erect with upward face,

Taut and tense to the white

Message of the moon's light.

What is he thinking of, you ask;

Caught you the eyes behind the mask?

Whence did he come, where would he go?

Answers but the resuming flow

Of that swift continuous glide,

Whispering from side to side,

Silvered boughs, branches dim,

All the world's a frame for him;

All the trees standing around

On the fascinated ground,

See him swifter, swifter, sweep,

Dazzling, till one wildest leap...

Whisht! he kneels. And he listens.

How his steady silver glistens!

He was listening; he was there;

Flash! he went. To the air

He a waiting ear had bent,

Silent; but before he went

Something somewhere else to seek,

He moved his lips as though to speak.

And we wait, and in vain,

For he will not come again.

Earth, grass, wood, and air,

As we stare, and we stare,

Which that fierce life did hold,

Tired, dim, void, cold.