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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Louise Driscoll

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

Old Roofs

Louise Driscoll

I
I HAVE seen old roofs,

Broken for winds to enter,

All their secrets flown like homing birds.

It seemed to me they were like broken words.

They babbled, inarticulate, of men

Who came and went and will not come again.

They were full of whispers and of shadows,

Provisioned for a dream’s viaticum.

These only had a voice,

All, all the other roofs were dumb!

II
Under an old roof I went one day,

But there was naught to see.

Singing, silken drapery

Went down the hall with me.

I was aware

Of feet upon the stair;

Soft laughter and a little sound of tears,

Muffled by many years.

It was the roof, the broken roof, that sung.

The living roofs were silent,

But the dead roof had a tongue!