Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.
TonightFannie Stearns Davis
M
Yet not too young to know
What terror round the dark halls clung
That aching day of snow.
I sat there all alone.
Cold sorrow held me quietly
Dumb as a snow-hid stone.
As in a picture-book:
The silent people in the hall,
My father’s frozen look,
So very black and new.
I watched it without weariness—
Ah, how the snow-blast blew!
Tonight you say you love me—me
Who leap to love you. Lo,
I am all yours so utterly
You need not speak, nor show
Out to our life’s last rim;
Out into death’s uncertain land,
Gracious be it or grim.
The old trick haunts me. Look!
I see your face, O new delight,
As in a picture-book.
The red rose on the shelf;
And, leaning to its passionate bloom,
Troubled with love, myself.
They have no right to see!
But now, as then, they are too wise:
They stare—they frighten me!