paroles de chanson The Witch of COÖS - Robert Frost
I
staid
the
night
for
shelter
at
a
farm
Behind
the
mountains,
with
a
mother
and
son,
Two
old-believers.
They
did
all
the
talking.
MOTHER
Folks
think
a
witch
who
has
familiar
spirits
She
could
call
up
to
pass
a
winter
evening,
But
won′t,
should
be
burned
at
the
stake
or
something.
Summoning
spirits
isn't
′Button,
button,
Who's
got
the
button,'
I
would
have
them
know.
SON:
Mother
can
make
a
common
table
rear
And
kick
with
two
legs
like
an
army
mule.
MOTHER:
And
when
I′ve
done
it,
what
good
have
I
Done?
Rather
than
tip
a
table
for
you,
let
me
Tell
you
what
Ralle
the
Sioux
Control
once
told
me.
He
said
the
dead
had
souls,
but
when
I
asked
him
How
could
that
be
--
I
thought
the
dead
were
souls,
He
broke
my
trance.
Don′t
that
make
you
suspicious
That
there's
something
the
dead
are
keeping
back?
Yes,
there′s
something
the
dead
are
keeping
back.
SON:
You
wouldn't
want
to
tell
him
what
we
have
Up
attic,
mother?
MOTHER:
Bones
--
a
skeleton.
SON:
But
the
headboard
of
mother′s
bed
is
pushed
Against
the'
attic
door:
the
door
is
nailed.
It′s
harmless.
Mother
hears
it
in
the
night
Halting
perplexed
behind
the
barrier
Of
door
and
headboard.
Where
it
wants
to
get
Is
back
into
the
cellar
where
it
came
from.
MOTHER:
We'll
never
let
them,
will
we,
son!
We'll
Never!
SON:
It
left
the
cellar
forty
years
ago
And
carried
itself
like
a
pile
of
dishes
Up
one
flight
from
the
cellar
to
the
kitchen,
Another
from
the
kitchen
to
the
bedroom,
Another
from
the
bedroom
to
the
attic,
Right
past
both
father
and
mother,
and
neither
stopped
It.
Father
had
gone
upstairs;
mother
was
downstairs.
I
was
a
baby:
I
don′t
know
where
I
was.
MOTHER:
The
only
fault
my
husband
found
with
me
--
I
went
to
sleep
before
I
went
to
bed,
Especially
in
winter
when
the
bed
Might
just
as
well
be
ice
and
the
clothes
snow.
The
night
the
bones
came
up
the
cellar-stairs
Toffile
had
gone
to
bed
alone
and
left
me,
But
left
an
open
door
to
cool
the
room
off
So
as
to
sort
of
turn
me
out
of
it.
I
was
just
coming
to
myself
enough
To
wonder
where
the
cold
was
coming
from,
When
I
heard
Toffile
upstairs
in
the
bedroom
And
thought
I
heard
him
downstairs
in
the
cellar.
The
board
we
had
laid
down
to
walk
dry-shod
on
When
there
was
water
in
the
cellar
in
spring
Struck
the
hard
cellar
bottom.
And
then
someone
Began
the
stairs,
two
footsteps
for
each
step,
The
way
a
man
with
one
leg
and
a
crutch,
Or
a
little
child,
comes
up.
It
wasn′t
Toffile:
It
wasn't
anyone
who
could
be
there.
The
bulkhead
double-doors
were
double-locked
And
swollen
tight
and
buried
under
snow.
The
cellar
windows
were
banked
up
with
sawdust
And
swollen
tight
and
buried
under
snow.
It
was
the
bones.
I
knew
them
--
and
good
reason.
My
first
impulse
was
to
get
to
the
knob
And
hold
the
door.
But
the
bones
didn′t
try
The
door;
they
halted
helpless
on
the
landing,
Waiting
for
things
to
happen
in
their
favour.'
The
faintest
restless
rustling
ran
all
through
them.
I
never
could
have
done
the
thing
I
did
If
the
wish
hadn′t
been
too
strong
in
me
To
see
how
they
were
mounted
for
this
walk.
I
had
a
vision
of
them
put
together
Not
like
a
man,
but
like
a
chandelier.
So
suddenly
I
flung
the
door
wide
on
him.
A
moment
he
stood
balancing
with
emotion,
And
all
but
lost
himself.
(A
tongue
of
fire
Flashed
out
and
licked
along
his
upper
teeth.
Smoke
rolled
inside
the
sockets
of
his
eyes.)
Then
he
came
at
me
with
one
hand
outstretched,
The
way
he
did
in
life
once;
but
this
time
I
struck
the
hand
off
brittle
on
the
floor,
And
fell
back
from
him
on
the
floor
myself.
The
finger-pieces
slid
in
all
directions.
(Where
did
I
see
one
of
those
pieces
lately?
Hand
me
my
button-box-
it
must
be
there.)
I
sat
up
on
the
floor
and
shouted,
'Toffile,
It′s
coming
up
to
you.'
It
had
its
choice
Of
the
door
to
the
cellar
or
the
hall.
It
took
the
hall
door
for
the
novelty,
And
set
off
briskly
for
so
slow
a
thing,
Stillgoing
every
which
way
in
the
joints,
though,
So
that
it
looked
like
lightning
or
a
scribble,
>From
the
slap
I
had
just
now
given
its
hand.
I
listened
till
it
almost
climbed
the
stairs
>From
the
hall
to
the
only
finished
bedroom,
Before
I
got
up
to
do
anything;
Then
ran
and
shouted,
'Shut
the
bedroom
door,
Toffile,
for
my
sake!′
′Company?'
he
said,
′Don't
make
me
get
up;
I′m
too
warm
in
bed.'
So
lying
forward
weakly
on
the
handrail
I
pushed
myself
upstairs,
and
in
the
light
(The
kitchen
had
been
dark)
I
had
to
own
I
could
see
nothing.
′Toffile,
I
don't
see
it.
It's
with
us
in
the
room
though.
It′s
the
bones.′
'What
bones?′
'The
cellar
bones-
out
of
the
grave.′
That
made
him
throw
his
bare
legs
out
of
bed
And
sit
up
by
me
and
take
hold
of
me.
I
wanted
to
put
out
the
light
and
see
If
I
could
see
it,
or
else
mow
the
room,
With
our
arms
at
the
level
of
our
knees,
And
bring
the
chalk-pile
down.
'I′ll
tell
you
what-
It's
looking
for
another
door
to
try.
The
uncommonly
deep
snow
has
made
him
think
Of
his
old
song,
The
Wild
Colonial
Boy,
He
always
used
to
sing
along
the
tote-road.
He's
after
an
open
door
to
get
out-doors.
Let′s
trap
him
with
an
open
door
up
attic.′
Toffile
agreed
to
that,
and
sure
enough,
Almost
the
moment
he
was
given
an
opening,
The
steps
began
to
climb
the
attic
stairs.
I
heard
them.
Toffile
didn't
seem
to
hear
them.
′Quick!'
I
slammed
to
the
door
and
held
the
knob.
′Toffile,
get
nails.'
I
made
him
nail
the
door
shut,
And
push
the
headboard
of
the
bed
against
it.
Then
we
asked
was
there
anything
Up
attic
that
we′d
ever
want
again.
The
attic
was
less
to
us
than
the
cellar.
If
the
bones
liked
the
attic,
let
them
have
it.
Let
them
stay
in
the
attic.
When
they
sometimes
Come
down
the
stairs
at
night
and
stand
perplexed
Behind
the
door
and
headboard
of
the
bed,
Brushing
their
chalky
skull
with
chalky
fingers,
With
sounds
like
the
dry
rattling
of
a
shutter,
That's
what
I
sit
up
in
the
dark
to
say-
To
no
one
any
more
since
Toffile
died.
2o3
Let
them
stay
in
the
attic
since
they
went
there.
I
promised
Toffile
to
be
cruel
to
them
For
helping
them
be
cruel
once
to
him.
SON:
We
think
they
had
a
grave
down
in
the
cellar.
MOTHER:
We
know
they
had
a
grave
down
in
the
cellar.
SON:
We
never
could
find
out
whose
bones
they
were.
MOTHER:
Yes,
we
could
too,
son.
Tell
the
truth
for
once.
They
were
a
man's
his
father
killed
for
me.
I
mean
a
man
he
killed
instead
of
me.
The
least
I
could
do
was
to
help
dig
their
grave.
We
were
about
it
one
night
in
the
cellar.
Son
knows
the
story:
but
′twas
not
for
him
To
tell
the
truth,
suppose
the
time
had
come.
Son
looks
surprised
to
see
me
end
a
lie
We′d
kept
all
these
years
between
ourselves
So
as
to
have
it
ready
for
outsiders.
But
to-night
I
don't
care
enough
to
lie-
I
don′t
remember
why
I
ever
cared.
Toffile,
if
he
were
here,
I
don't
believe
Could
tell
you
why
he
ever
cared
himself-
She
hadn′t
found
the
finger-bone
she
wanted
Among
the
buttons
poured
out
in
her
lap.
I
verified
the
name
next
morning:
Toffile.
The
rural
letter-box
said
Toffile
Lajway.
1 The Road Not Taken
2 Death of a Hired Man
3 Why Wait for Science / Etherealizing / Provide, Provide
4 Mowing
5 One More Brevity
6 One Step Backward Taken / Choose Something Like a Star: Happiness Makes Up in Height
7 West-Running Brook
8 The Pasture
9 The Witch of COÖS
10 Birches
11 Mending Wall
12 Reluctance
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