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				Title:     Reincarnation 
			    
Author: Ella Wheeler Wilcox [
More Titles by Wilcox]		                
			    
He slept as weary toilers do,
   She gazed up at the moon.
He stirred and said, "Wife, come to bed";
   She answered, "Soon, full soon."
(Oh! that strange mystery of the dead moon's face.)
Her cheek was wan, her wistful mouth
   Was lifted like a cup,
The moonful night dripped liquid light:
   She seemed to quaff it up.
(Oh! that unburied corpse that lies in space.)
Her life had held but drudgery--
   She spelled her Bible thro';
Of books and lore she knew no more
   Than little children do.
(Oh! the weird wonder of that pallid sphere.)
Her youth had been a loveless waste,
   Starred by no holiday.
And she had wed for roof, and bread;
   She gave her work in pay.
(Oh! the moon-memories, vague and strange and dear.)
She drank the night's insidious wine,
   And saw another scene:
A stately room--rare flowers in bloom,
   Herself in silken sheen.
(Oh! vast the chambers of the moon, and wide.)
A step drew near, a curtain stirred;
   She shook with sweet alarms.
Oh! splendid face; oh! manly grace;
   Oh! strong impassioned arms.
(Oh! silent moon, what secrets do you hide!)
The warm red lips of thirsting love
   On cheek and brow were pressed;
As the bees know where honeys grow,
   They sought her mouth, her breast.
(Oh! the dead moon holds many a dead delight.)
The speaker stirred and gruffly spake,
   "Come, wife, where have you been?"
She whispered low, "Dear God, I go--
   But 'tis the seventh sin."
(Oh! the sad secrets of that orb of white.)
[The end]
Ella Wheeler Wilcox's poem: Reincarnation
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