Lyrics The Hill - Richard Buckner
(181.
Tom
Merritt)
At
first
I
suspected
something—
She
acted
so
calm
and
absent-minded.
And
one
day
I
heard
the
back
door
shut,
As
I
entered
the
front,
and
I
saw
him
slink
Back
of
the
smokehouse
into
the
lot,
And
run
across
the
field.
And
I
meant
to
kill
him
on
sight.
But
that
day,
walking
near
Fourth
Bridge,
Without
a
stick
or
a
stone
at
hand,
All
of
a
sudden
I
saw
him
standing,
Scared
to
death,
holding
his
rabbits,
And
all
I
could
say
was,
"Don't,
Don't,
Don't,"
As
he
aimed
and
fired
at
my
heart.
(3.
Ollie
McGee)
Have
you
seen
walking
through
the
village
A
man
with
downcast
eyes
and
haggard
face?
That
is
my
husband
who,
by
secret
cruelty
Never
to
be
told,
robbed
me
of
my
youth
and
my
beauty;
Till
at
last,
wrinkled
and
with
yellow
teeth,
And
with
broken
pride
and
shameful
humility,
I
sank
into
the
grave.
But
what
think
you
gnaws
at
my
husband's
heart?
The
face
of
what
I
was,
the
face
of
what
he
made
me!
These
are
driving
him
to
the
place
where
I
lie.
In
death,
therefore,
I
am
avenged.
(36.
Julia
Miller)
We
quarreled
that
morning,
For
he
was
sixty-five,
and
I
was
thirty,
And
I
was
nervous
and
heavy
with
the
child
Whose
birth
I
dreaded.
I
thought
over
the
last
letter
written
me
By
that
estranged
young
soul
Whose
betrayal
of
me
I
had
concealed
By
marrying
the
old
man.
Then
I
took
morphine
and
sat
down
to
read.
Across
the
blackness
that
came
over
my
eyes
I
see
the
flickering
light
of
these
words
even
now:
"And
Jesus
said
unto
him,
Verily
I
say
unto
thee,
To-day
thou
shalt
Be
with
me
in
paradise."
(184.
Elizabeth
Childers)
Dust
of
my
dust,
And
dust
with
my
dust,
O,
child
who
died
as
you
entered
the
world,
Dead
with
my
death!
Not
knowing
Breath,
though
you
tried
so
hard,
With
a
heart
that
beat
when
you
lived
with
me,
And
stopped
when
you
left
me
for
Life.
It
is
well,
my
child.
For
you
never
traveled
The
long,
long
way
that
begins
with
school
days,
When
little
fingers
blur
under
the
tears
That
fall
on
the
crooked
letters.
And
the
earliest
wound,
when
a
little
mate
Leaves
you
alone
for
another;
And
sickness,
and
the
face
of
Fear
by
the
bed;
The
death
of
a
father
or
mother;
Or
shame
for
them,
or
poverty;
The
maiden
sorrow
of
school
days
ended;
And
eyeless
Nature
that
makes
you
drink
From
the
cup
of
Love,
though
you
know
it's
poisoned;
To
whom
would
your
flower-face
have
been
lifted?
Botanist,
weakling?
Cry
of
what
blood
to
yours?—
Pure
or
foul,
for
it
makes
no
matter,
It's
blood
that
calls
to
our
blood.
And
then
your
children—oh,
what
might
they
be?
And
what
your
sorrow?
Child!
Child!
Death
is
better
than
Life!
(134.
Oscar
Hummel)
I
staggered
on
through
darkness,
There
was
a
hazy
sky,
a
few
stars
Which
I
followed
as
best
I
could.
It
was
nine
o'clock,
I
was
trying
to
get
home.
But
somehow
I
was
lost,
Though
really
keeping
the
road.
Then
I
reeled
through
a
gate
and
into
a
yard,
And
called
at
the
top
of
my
voice:
"Oh,
Fiddler!
Oh,
Mr.
Jones!"
(I
thought
it
was
his
house
and
he
would
show
me
the
way
home.)
But
who
should
step
out
but
A.
D.
Blood,
In
his
night
shirt,
waving
a
stick
of
wood,
And
roaring
about
the
cursed
saloons,
And
the
criminals
they
made?
"You
drunken
Oscar
Hummel,"
he
said,
As
I
stood
there
weaving
to
and
fro,
Taking
the
blows
from
the
stick
in
his
hand
Till
I
dropped
down
dead
at
his
feet.
(37.
Johnnie
Sayre)
Father,
thou
canst
never
know
The
anguish
that
smote
my
heart
For
my
disobedience,
the
moment
I
felt
The
remorseless
wheel
of
the
engine
Sink
into
the
crying
flesh
of
my
leg.
As
they
carried
me
to
the
home
of
widow
Morris
I
could
see
the
school-house
in
the
valley
To
which
I
played
truant
to
steal
rides
upon
the
trains.
I
prayed
to
live
until
I
could
ask
your
forgiveness—
And
then
your
tears,
your
broken
words
of
comfort!
From
the
solace
of
that
hour
I
have
gained
infinite
happiness.
Thou
wert
wise
to
chisel
for
me:
"Taken
from
the
evil
to
come."
(16.
Reuben
Pantier)
Well,
Emily
Sparks,
your
prayers
were
not
wasted,
Your
love
was
not
all
in
vain.
I
owe
whatever
I
was
in
life
To
your
hope
that
would
not
give
me
up,
To
your
love
that
saw
me
still
as
good.
Dear
Emily
Sparks,
let
me
tell
you
the
story.
I
pass
the
effect
of
my
father
and
mother;
The
milliner's
daughter
made
me
trouble
And
out
I
went
in
the
world,
Where
I
passed
through
every
peril
known
Of
wine
and
women
and
joy
of
life.
One
night,
in
a
room
in
the
Rue
de
Rivoli,
I
was
drinking
wine
with
a
black-eyed
cocotte,
And
the
tears
swam
into
my
eyes.
She
thought
they
were
amorous
tears
and
smiled
For
thought
of
her
conquest
over
me.
But
my
soul
was
three
thousand
miles
away,
In
the
days
when
you
taught
me
in
Spoon
River.
And
just
because
you
no
more
could
love
me,
Nor
pray
for
me,
nor
write
me
letters,
The
eternal
silence
of
you
spoke
instead.
And
the
black-eyed
cocotte
took
the
tears
for
hers,
As
well
as
the
deceiving
kisses
I
gave
her.
Somehow,
from
that
hour,
I
had
a
new
vision—
Dear
Emily
Sparks!
(8.
Amanda
Barker)
Henry
got
me
with
child,
Knowing
that
I
could
not
bring
forth
life
Without
losing
my
own.
In
my
youth
therefore
I
entered
the
portals
of
dust.
Traveler,
it
is
believed
in
the
village
where
I
lived
That
Henry
loved
me
with
a
husband's
love,
But
I
proclaim
from
the
dust
That
he
slew
me
to
gratify
his
hatred.
(72.
William
and
Emily)
There
is
something
about
Death
Like
love
itself!
If
with
some
one
with
whom
you
have
known
passion,
And
the
glow
of
youthful
love,
You
also,
after
years
of
life
Together,
feel
the
sinking
of
the
fire,
And
thus
fade
away
together,
Gradually,
faintly,
delicately,
As
it
were
in
each
other's
arms,
Passing
from
the
familiar
room—
That
is
a
power
of
unison
between
souls
Like
love
itself!

1 Mrs. Merritt
2 Tom Merritt
3 Elmer Karr
4 Ollie McGee
5 Fletcher McGee
6 Julia Miller
7 Willard Fluke
8 Elizabeth Childers
9 A.D. Blood
10 Oscar Hummel
11 Nellie Clark
12 Johnnie Sayre
13 Dora Williams
14 Reuben Pantier
15 Emily Sparks
16 Amanda Barker
17 The Hill
18 William + Emily
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