The Poetry Corner

The Kelso Road

By Frank James Prewett

Morning and evening are mine, And the bright noon-day; But night to no man doth belong When the sad ghosts play. From Kelso town I took the road By the full-flood Tweed; The black clouds swept across the moon With devouring greed. Seek ye no peace who tread the night; I felt above my head Blowing the cloud's edge, faces wry In pale fury spread. Twelve surly elves were digging graves Beside black Eden brook; Eleven dug and stared at me, But one read in a book. In Birgham trees and hedges rocked, The moon was drowned in black; At Hirsel woods I shrieked to find A fiend astride my back. His legs he closed about my breast, His hands upon my head, Till Coldstream lights beamed in the trees And he wailed and fled. Morning and evening are mine, And the bright noon-heat, But at night the sad thin ghosts For their revels meet.