In a doomed and empty house in Houndsditch All night long I lie awake and listen, While all night the ghost of Mrs. Murphy Tiptoes up and down the wheezy staircase, Sweeling ghostly grease of quaking candles. Mrs. Murphy, timidest of spectres, You who were the cheeriest of charers, With the heart of innocence and only Torn between a zest for priests and porter, Mrs. Murphy of the ample bosom, -- Suckler of a score or so of children ("Children? Bless you! Why, I've buried six, Sir.") Who in forty years wore out three husbands And one everlasting, shameless bonnet Which I've little doubt was coffined with you -- Mrs. Murphy, wherefor do you wander, Sweeling ghostly grease of quaking candles, Up and down the stairs you scrubbed so sorely, Scrubbed till they were naked, dank, and aching? Now that you are dead, is this their vengeance? Recollecting all you made them suffer With your bristled brush and soapy water When you scrubbed them naked, dank and aching, Have they power to hold your ghostly footsteps Chained as to an everlasting treadmill? Mrs. Murphy, think you 'twould appease them If I rose now in my shivering nightshirt, Rose and told them how you, too, had suffered -- You, their seeming tyrant, but their bondslave -- Toiling uncomplaining in their service, Till your knuckles and your knees were knotted Into writhing fires of red rheumatics, And how, in the end, 'twas they who killed you? Even should their knots still harden to you, Bow your one and all-enduring bonnet Till your ear is level with my keyhole, While I whisper ghostly consolation: Know this house is marked out for the spoiler, Doomed to fall to Hobnails with his pickaxe; And its crazy staircase chopped to firewood, Splintered, bundled, burned to smoke and ashes, Soon shall perish, scattered to the fourwinds. Then, God rest your spirit, Mrs. Murphy! Yet, who knows! A staircase ... Mrs. Murphy, God forbid that you be doomed to tiptoe Through eternity, a timid spectre, Sweeling ghostly grease of quaking candles, Up and down the spectre of a staircase, While all night I lie awake and listen In a damned and ghostly house in Houndsditch! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MEMORIAL DAY by WILLIAM E. BROOKS EPIGRAM: 118. ON GUT by BEN JONSON LA BELLA BONA ROBA by RICHARD LOVELACE AUTUMN WOODS by ANNA M. ACKERMANN SONNET: THE RARITY OF GENIUS by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH SKY WRITING by MARY FINETTE BARBER INCOGNITA IN THE TEMPLE OF THESEUS by SEYMOUR GREEN WHEELER BENJAMIN |