Hallow-E’en, 1915

Summary

The poem imagines the fallen—soldiers who lie in "alien graves"—returning one October evening as gentle, silent shades to wander familiar homesteads and be quietly welcomed by the domestic scenes they left: lamplight, a grieving figure by the fire, church chimes and the river's song. Pastoral images (dew, orchard boughs, a robin singing "Nunc Dimittis") and the contrast with the "weary trenches" and the "pitiless Eastern sky" emphasize the longing for home and the relief of a brief respite from war; religious undertones suggest peaceful dismissal. Tender, elegiac and consoling, the poem turns grief inward—those left behind are "ghosts" for lack of the dead—while honoring memory and expressing a yearning for intimate reconciliation between the living place and the dead who once belonged to it.

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Will you come back to us, men of our hearts, to-night
In the misty close of the brief October day?
Will you leave the alien graves where you sleep and steal away
To see the gables and eaves of home grow dark in the evening light?

O men of the manor and moated hall and farm,
Come back to-night, treading softly over the grass;
The dew of the autumn dusk will not betray where you pass;
The watchful dog may stir in his sleep but he’ll raise no hoarse alarm.

Then you will stand, not strangers, but wishful to look
At the kindly lamplight shed from the open door,
And the fire-lit casement where one, having wept you sore,
Sits dreaming alone with her sorrow, not heeding her open book.

Forgotten awhile the weary trenches, the dome
Of pitiless Eastern sky, in this quiet hour
When no sound breaks the hush but the chimes from the old church tower,
And the river’s song at the weir,—ah! then we will welcome you home.

You will come back to us just as the robin sings
Nunc Dimittis from the larch to a sun late set
In purple woodlands; when caught like silver fish in a net
The stars gleam out through the orchard boughs and the church owl flaps his wings.

We have no fear of you, silent shadows, who tread
The leaf-bestrewn paths, the dew-wet lawns. Draw near
To the glowing fire, the empty chair,—we shall not fear,
Being but ghosts for the lack of you, ghosts of our well-beloved dead.