The Poetry Corner

Under

By John Collings Squire, Sir

In this house, she said, in this high second storey, In this room where we sit, above the midnight street, There runs a rivulet, narrow but very rapid, Under the still floor and your unconscious feet. The lamp on the table made a cone of light That spread to the base of the walls: above was in gloom. I heard her words with surprise; had I worked here so long, And never divined that secret of the room? "But how," I asked, "does the water climb so high?" "I do not know," she said, "but the thing is there; Pull up the boards while I go and fetch you a rod." She passed, and I heard her creaking descend the stair. And I rose and rolled the Turkey carpet back From the two broad boards by the north wall she had named, And, hearing already the crumple of water, I knelt And lifted the first of them up; and the water gleamed, Bordered with little frosted heaps of ice, And, as she came back with a rod and line that swung, I moved the other board; in the yellow light The water trickled frostily, slackly along. I took the tackle, a stiff black rubber worm, That stuck out its pointed tail from a cumbrous hook, "But there can't be fishing in water like this," I said. And she, with weariness, "There is no ice there.Look." And I stood there, gazing down at a stream in spate, Holding the rod in my undecided hand... Till it all in a moment grew smooth and still and clear, And along its deep bottom of slaty grey sand Three scattered little trout, as black as tadpoles, Came waggling slowly along the glass-dark lake, And I swung my arm to drop my pointing worm in, And then I stopped again with a little shake. For I heard the thin gnat-like voices of the trout My body felt woolly and sick and astray and cold, Crying with mockery in them: "You are not allowed To take us, you know, under ten years old." And the room swam, the calm woman and the yellow lamp, The table, and the dim-glistering walls, and the floor, And the stream sank away, and all whirled dizzily, And I moaned, and the pain at my heart grew more and more. And I fainted away, utterly miserable. Falling in a place where there was nothing to pass, Knowing all sorrows and the mothers and sisters of sorrows, And the pain of the darkness before anything ever was.