The Stone

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(1914)

191657The StoneWilfrid Wilson Gibson

"And will you cut a stone for him,

To set above his head?

And will you cut a stone for him -

A stone for him?” she said.


Three days before, a splintered rock

had struck her lover dead -

Had struck him in the quarry dead,

Where, careless of the warning call,

He loitered, while the shot was fired -

A lively stripling, brave and tall,

And sure of all his heart desired...

A flash, a shock,

A rumbling fall...

And, broken ‘neath the broken rock,

A lifeless heap, with face of clay;

As still as any stone he lay,

With eyes that saw the end of all.


I went to break the news to her,

And I could hear my own heart beat

With dread of what my lips might say

But, some poor fool had sped before;

and flinging wide her father’s door,

Had blurted out the news to her,

Had struck her lover dead for her,

Had struck the girl’s heart dead in her,

Had struck life, lifeless, at a word,

and dropped it at her feet:

Then hurried on his witless way,

Scarce knowing she had heard.


And when I came, she stood, alone,

A woman turned to stone:

And, though no word at all she said,

I knew that all was known.

Because her heart was dead,

she did not sigh or moan,


His mother wept:

She could not weep.

Her lover slept:

she could not sleep.

Three days, three nights,

She did not stir:

Three days, three nights,

Were one to her,

Who never closed her eyes

From sunset to sunrise,

From dawn to evenfall:

Her tearless, staring eyes,

That seeing naught, saw all.


The fourth night when I came from work,

I found her at my door.

“And will you cut a stone for him?”

She said, and spoke no more:

But followed me, as I went in,

And sank upon a chair;

And fixed her grey eyes on my face,

With still, unseeing stare.

And, as she waited patiently,

I could not bear to feel

Those still, grey eyes that followed me,

Those eyes that plucked the heart from me,

those eyes that sucked the breath from me

And curdled the warm blood in me,

Those eyes that cut me to the bone,

And pierced my marrow like cold steel.


And so I rose, and sought a stone;

And cut it, smooth and square:

And, as I worked, she sat and watched,

Beside me, in her chair.

Night after night, by candlelight,

I cut her lover’s name:

Night after night, so still and white,

And like a ghost she came;

And sat beside me in her chair;

And watched with eyes aflame.


She eyed each stroke;

She hardly stirred;

She never spoke a single word:

And not a sound of murmur broke

the quiet, save the mallet stroke.


With still eyes ever on my hands,

With eyes that seemed to burn my hands,

My wincing, overwearied hands,

She watched, with bloodless lips apart,

and silent, indrawn breath:

And every stroke my chisel cut,

Death cut still deeper in her heart:

The two of us were chiselling,

Together, I and death.


And when at length the job was done,

And I had laid the mallet by,

As if, at last, her peace were won,

She breathed his name; and, with a sigh,

Passed slowly through the open door:

And never crossed my threshold more.


Next night I laboured late, alone,

To cut her name upon the stone.

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1962, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 61 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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