Summary


"Halloween" is a short poem by Madison Julius Cawein set deep in a woodland on the night of Halloween, where moonlight, mist, and silence conspire to blur the line between the living and the dead. A man moves through a forest of shadows and memories, drawn by gray eyes gleaming in moonlight and hair blown wild on the wind — the unmistakable presence of a lost love. With each stanza, the encounter grows more intimate and more impossible, building toward a single breathless moment of reunion with someone long gone.

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It was down in the woodland on last Hallowe’en,
Where silence and darkness had built them a lair,
That I felt the dim presence of her, the unseen,
And heard her still step on the hush-haunted air.

It was last Hallowe’en in the glimmer and swoon
Of mist and of moonlight, where once we had sinned,
That I saw the gray gleam of her eyes in the moon,
And hair, like a raven, blown wild on the wind.

It was last Hallowe’en where starlight and dew
Made mystical marriage on flower and leaf,
That she led me with looks of a love, that I knew
Was dead, and the voice of a passion too brief.

It was last Hallowe’en in the forest of dreams,
Where trees are eidolons and flowers have eyes,
That I saw her pale face like the foam of far streams,
And heard, like the night-wind, her tears and her sighs.

It was last Hallowe’en, the haunted, the dread,
In the wind-tattered wood, by the storm-twisted pine,
That I, who am living, kept tryst with the dead,
And clasped her a moment who once had been mine.

Credits

Madison Julius Cawein was an American poet from Louisville, Kentucky, who lived from 1865 to 1914 and was celebrated for his richly atmospheric verse rooted in the natural landscapes of the American South. Often called the "Keats of Kentucky," he published over thirty collections during his lifetime. "Halloween" showcases his signature gift for weaving sensory detail — moonlight, mist, wind-twisted pines — into poems that feel genuinely haunted.