| Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (18331908). A Victorian Anthology, 18371895. 1895. |
| |
| The Dead Coach |
| | | Katharine Tynan Hinkson (b. 186) |
| |
| |
| AT night when sick folk wakeful lie, | |
| I heard the dead coach passing by, | |
| And heard it passing wild and fleet, | |
| And knew my time was come not yet. | |
| |
| Click-clack, click-clack, the hoofs went past, | 5 |
| Who takes the dead coach travels fast, | |
| On and away through the wild night, | |
| The dead must rest ere morning light. | |
| |
| If one might follow on its track | |
| The coach and horses, midnight black, | 10 |
| Within should sit a shape of doom | |
| That beckons one and all to come. | |
| |
| God pity them to-night who wait | |
| To hear the dead coach at their gate, | |
| And him who hears, though sense be dim, | 15 |
| The mournful dead coach stop for him. | |
| |
| He shall go down with a still face, | |
| And mount the steps and take his place, | |
| The door be shut, the order said! | |
| How fast the pace is with the dead! | 20 |
| |
| Click-clack, click-clack, the hour is chill, | |
| The dead coach climbs the distant hill. | |
| Now, God, the Father of us all, | |
| Wipe Thou the widows tears that fall! | |
| |
|
|
|