The Path Through the Marsh by Leah Bodine Drake

 

There is a path through a marsh

That I must take to get home…

Mallows and thick black loam,

Alder and bog-grass harsh,
And the marsh-pools glinting with lights

Of the sunset that stains the sky:

That is all to the eye,

Yet something is there that affrights.
Something which I never see

Though I feel its eyes on my back

As I cross on that narrow track,-

Something that watches me.
It is never bittern, who thumps

At his hidden churn in the reeds.

It is never heron, who feeds

In the shallows beside old stumps,
Or spotted bull-frog, who eyes

Me passing his tiny lake

Where the great green bubbles break

And the veils of the bog-mist rise.
But deeper than long-drowned log

Something that never sleeps

Lies crouched in those oozy deeps,

Something as old as the bog….
They say that there was a a time

When Indians called this sod

“The place of the evil god,”

And prayed to the quivering slime.
They say that a Face would appear

In the mists that the night-winds brew,

And would ask for Its ancient due:

One human heart a year.
All that is a long-closed book…

But still, as I pass on that track,

I feel something’s eyes on my back

And I never dare turn to look,
For fear that the mists should spread

And curdle to mouth and eyes

Malefic and old and wise,

Demanding Its terrible bread!