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No Lilies for Lisette

Said the Door: “She came in
With no shadow of sin;
Turned the key in the lock,
Slipped out of her frock,
The robe she liked best
When for supper she dressed.
Then a letter she tore . . .
What a wan look she wore!”
Said the Door.
 
Said the Chair: “She sat down
With a pitiful frown,
And then (oh, it’s queer)
Just one lonely tear
Rolled down her pale cheek.
How I hoped she would speak
As she let down her hair,”
Said the Chair.
 
Said the Glass: “Then she gazed
Into me like one dazed;
As with delicate grace
She made up her face,
Her cheeks and her lips
With rose finger—tips,
So lovely —alas!
Then she turned on the gas.”
Said the Glass.
 
Said the Bed: “Down she lay
In a weariful way,
Like an innocent child,
To her fate reconciled;
Hands clasped to her breast,
In prayer or in rest:
‘Dear Mother,’ she said,
Then pillowed her head,”
Said the Bed.
 
Said the Room: “Then the gleam
Of the moon like a dream,
Soft silvered my space,
And it fell on her face
That was never so sweet
As her heart ceased to beat . . .
Then the moon fled and gloom
Fell like funeral plume,”
Said the Room.
 
“Just a whore,”
Said the Door;
“Yet so fair,”
Said the Chair;
“Frail, alas!”
Said the Glass;
“Now she’s dead,”
Said the Bed;
“Sorry doom,”
Said the Room. . . .
 
Then they all,
Floor and wall,
Quiet grew,
Ceiling too;
Like a tomb
Was the room;
With hushed breath
Hailing Death:
Soul’s release,
Silence, Peace.

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