Erinnys.

Through stark he lieth and cold in clay,1
                        
                        Though he utters neither good nor ill,2
                        
                        There is that which my dagger could not kill—3
                        
                        A haunting horror night and day,4
                        
                        That makes my blood stand still—5
                        
                        That makes my spirit shrink and shiver,6
                        
                        That dwells within me for ever and ever,7
                        
                        A dark and terrible dream, wherewith I cannot away !8
                        
                        Nightly and daily I die with fear,9
                        
                        Lest the breeze, as it wanders far and near,10
                        
                        Should speak my story in mortal ear ;11
                        
                        Or the Hand that writes in letters of fire,12
                        
                        When the raving clouds contend in heaven,13
                        
                        Should flash my name in the wild far-gleaming levin,14
                        
                        And the pattering rain should conspire,15
                        
                        With ever-heedful tones, as it fell,16
                        
                        This bloody rumour that cries from hell,17
                        
                        Slowly to shape and syllable.18
                        Suddenly in a frenzied fright,19
                        
                        With cold damp brow, and stiffened hair,20
                        
                        And lips that trembled in vain for a prayer,21
                        
                        I started from my bed,22
                        
                        In the deep heart of the silent night—23
                        
                        For there grew in the dark a lurid light,24
                        
                        And my eyes were chained to a ghastly sight,25
                        
                        The white weird face of the dead ;26
                        
                        And I saw the blood of the red wound drip,27
                        
                        And the wasted finger laid on the lip—28
                        
                        O for darkness of eyes, darkness of mind !29
                        
                        Great God, let the heat of thine anger strike me blind !30
                        The very breath I breathe is a secret strife,31
                        
                        And might well make a coward of the brave.32
                        
                        I shudder to see the light of life ;33
                        
                        But death with a hundred hells is rife,34
                        
                        And I dare not lift the poison or knife,35
                        
                        And suddenly seek the grave.36
                        
                        There is rest for all, but not for me ;37
                        
                        I discern not any term or scope,38
                        
                        But a ghastly hope, which is not a hope,39
                        
                        For an end which is never to be.40
                        And still the Angel claims the price of guilt ;41
                        
                        Still the Voice haunts me through the weary years,42
                        
                        Full of anguish, full of fears,43
                        
                        Seeming to search the distant spheres,44
                        
                        And to whisper the tale in a thousand ears,45
                        
                        How the crimson river of life was spilt ;46
                        
                        And in the desert gloom of my breast47
                        
                        So long this fiery curse I bear,48
                        
                        That to me now, in my mad despair,49
                        
                        Change of pain would be almost as sweet as rest !50