- "AND will you cut a stone for him,
- To set above his head?
- And will you cut a stone for him--
- A stone for him?" she said.
- Three days before, a splintered rock
- Had struck her lover dead--
- Had struck him in the quarry dead,
- Where, careless of a warning call,
- He loitered, while the shot was fired--
- A lively stripling, brave and tall,
- And sure of all his heart desired . . .
- A flash, a shock,
- A rumbling fall . . .
- And, broken 'neath the broken rock,
- A lifeless heap, with face of clay,
- And still as any stone he lay,
- With eyes that saw the end of all.
- I went to break the news to her:
- And I could hear my own heart beat
- With dread of what my lips might say;
- But some poor fool had sped before;
- And, flinging wide her father's door,
- Had blurted out the news to her,
- Had struck her lover dead for her,
- Had struck the girl's heart dead in her,
- Had struck life, lifeless, at a word,
- And dropped it at her feet:
- Then hurried on his witless way,
- Scarce knowing she had heard.
- And when I came, she stood alone--
- A woman, turned to stone:
- And, though no word at all she said,
- I knew that all was known.
- Because her heart was dead,
- She did not sigh nor moan.
- His mother wept:
- She could not weep.
- Her lover slept:
- She could not sleep.
- Three days, three nights,
- She did not stir:
- Three days, three nights,
- Were one to her,
- Who never closed her eyes
- From sunset to sunrise,
- From dawn to evenfall--
- Her tearless, staring eyes,
- That, seeing naught, saw all.
- The fourth night when I came from work,
- I found her at my door.
- "And will you cut a stone for him?"
- She said: and spoke no more:
- But followed me, as I went in,
- And sank upon a chair;
- And fixed her grey eyes on my face,
- With still, unseeing stare.
- And, as she waited patiently,
- I could not bear to feel
- Those still, grey eyes that followed me,
- Those eyes that plucked the heart from me,
- Those eyes that sucked the breath from me
- And curdled the warm blood in me,
- Those eyes that cut me to the bone,
- And cut my marrow like cold steel.
- And so I rose and sought a stone;
- And cut it smooth and square:
- And, as I worked, she sat and watched,
- Beside me, in her chair.
- Night after night, by candlelight,
- I cut her lover's name:
- Night after night, so still and white,
- And like a ghost she came;
- And sat beside me, in her chair,
- And watched with eyes aflame.
- She eyed each stroke,
- And hardly stirred:
- she never spoke
- A single word:
- And not a sound or murmur broke
- The quiet, save the mallet stroke.
- With still eyes ever on my hands,
- With eyes that seemed to burn my hands,
- My wincing, overwearied hands,
- She watched, with bloodless lips apart,
- And silent, indrawn breath:
- And every stroke my chisel cut,
- Death cut still deeper in her heart:
- The two of us were chiselling,
- Together, I and Death.
- And when at length my job was done,
- And I had laid the mallet by,
- As if, at last, her peace were won,
- She breathed his name, and, with a sigh,
- Passed slowly through the open door:
- And never crossed my threshold more.
- Next night I laboured late, alone,
- To cut her name upon the stone.
- Wilfrid Wilson Gibson
17 May 2008
The Stone
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