Home Again

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Far down the lane
  A window pane
  Gleams 'mid the trees through night and rain.
  The weeds are dense
  Through which a fence
  Of pickets rambles, none sees whence,
  Before a porch, all indistinct of line,
  O'er-grown and matted with wistaria-vine.

  No thing is heard,
  No beast or bird,
  Only the rain by which are stirred
  The draining leaves,
  And trickling eaves
  Of crib and barn one scarce perceives;
  And garden-beds where old-time flow'rs hang wet
  The phlox, the candytuft, and mignonette.

  The hour is late--
  At any rate
  She has not heard him at the gate:
  Upon the roof
  The rain was proof
  Against his horse's galloping hoof:
  And when the old gate with its weight and chain
  Creaked, she imagined 'twas the wind and rain.

  Along he steals
  With cautious heels,
  And by the lamplit window kneels:
  And there she sits,
  And rocks and knits
  Within the shadowy light that flits
  On face and hair, so sweetly sad and gray,
  Dreaming of him she thinks is far away.

  Upon his cheeks--
  Is it the streaks
  Of rain, as now the old porch creaks
  Beneath his stride?
  Then, warm and wide,
  The door flings and she's at his side--
  "Mother!"--and he, back from the war, her boy,
  Kisses her face all streaming wet with joy.

© Madison Julius Cawein