A Silent Woman
Through the lees did a plain man
Leisurely travel by.
He was but a tiller of the land,
Who grew wheat and rye.
From the town did that plain man
Returned by the road,
From that town where in a mart
He had sold his load.
He was but a plain man
Who lived by the land.
He rode on a dappled mule
Greyed by the wind.
In that country road by the lees
A woman with unkempt hair,
A woman with tear stained cheeks
Alone sat crying there.
In that lonely country road
That led to the town,
Sat a woman with lovely eyes
No man had known.
The plain man returning then
To his plain home
Saw the woman with lovely eyes
Sitting on a tomb.
The woman had tear stained cheeks;
Wind dried her lips.
The woman sat musing on her hands
bloodied at the tips.
'What troubles thee,' asked the man,
But no reply had she.
'What troubles thee,' asked he--
She moaned silently.
'Art thou ill,' asked the man
To the woman mute.
'Art thou ill,' asked the man,
But no words issued.
In that lonely country road
Where the wind rests,
The plain man and the silent woman
Made strange guests.
In that lonely country road
A woman sat sobbing;
And the plain man beside her
Made for a strange setting.
'I'll set you on my mule,' said he,
The tiller of the land.
'I'll set you on my mule,' said he,
Taking her by the hand.
And the woman riding gently
Leaned sidelong on.
And the plain man led the beast
Away from the sun.
Away he went, leading the beast
When the mule turned astray
Just as the moon showed her white face
'neath the dusky sky.
He was led by a strange fate
Towards the dampen woods,
And through the whole affair was he
Blinded by the moods.
And through the whole affair the woman
Leaned sidelong on,
Her flaccid limbs swaying meekly
Under a full moon.
The plain man then led this crew
Towards a bonfire,
Whereupon he woke from the spell
For the chilly air.
There he woke from the spell
And saw lying there
Two brothers from the neighbouring town,
A mischievous pair.
There two brothers lay dead,
Each had throats opened.
Although the wind blew coldly
The bonfire quickened.
Off to the corpses' side the man
Found women's jewelry,
A wire freckled with dried blood,
And signs of revelry.
There the plain man turned around
And saw the silent woman.
She no longer leaned to her sides
But sat oblique and wan.
Her eyes were empty but the man
Felt a great chill.
For two men had throats opened
And lay there still.
The silent woman gazed heavenward
With wistful eyes,
And the farmer's hushed prayers
Were lost in his cries.

Art for Art's Sake