72
THE CLOTHES OF A GHOST.
There's a withering, weird half-picture of me—
No, of my clothes—on a shadowy wall:
A wonderful painter, they said, was he,
Who studied my drapery, that was all,
Not guessing what I might be.
No, of my clothes—on a shadowy wall:
A wonderful painter, they said, was he,
Who studied my drapery, that was all,
Not guessing what I might be.
Yet he followed me, in my far, flushed day,
And thought he knew me, and held me dear;
And now, should I waver across his way,
He would grow as ghastly as I am, with fear,
Though he is so wise and grey!
And thought he knew me, and held me dear;
And now, should I waver across his way,
He would grow as ghastly as I am, with fear,
Though he is so wise and grey!
But my beautiful clothes were his despair—
They were so well-cut, so charmingly made.
It is best that they were not worn threadbare;
It is best that I did not feel them fade;
It is best—did he ever care?
They were so well-cut, so charmingly made.
It is best that they were not worn threadbare;
It is best that I did not feel them fade;
It is best—did he ever care?
I, a thing too fearfully fine to show,
Or stain the starlight wherein I pass,
Must still have the old, fierce vanity grow,
Must yearn by the water, as by a glass,
For a glimpse of—nothing, I know!
Or stain the starlight wherein I pass,
Must still have the old, fierce vanity grow,
Must yearn by the water, as by a glass,
For a glimpse of—nothing, I know!
Oh, my lovely clothes that I still admire!
They were only fashioned for moth and rust;
They were only fashioned for moth and rust;