I was home on leave for the winter,
And the summit of all my desires
Was reached when I took my modest stud
To a hunting box in the shires.
It had always been more than my pocket
Could stand, a hunting box to keep,
But here in the heart of the grass-land
Was just what I wanted, and cheap;
I had read of it in a paper,
In a well-known paper too,
So I wrote at once and took it,
It was almost too good to be true.
Greatfox Lodge they called it,
A six mile drive from D——,
Twelve rooms and stabling for seven,
Which was more than enough for me;
The house had been empty for years
And that in itself seemed wrong,
[Pg 27]
But one doesn’t ask too many questions
When one’s getting a thing for a song.
The season had only just started
When I got settled into the place,
Two maids, three grooms, and six horses;
And I felt like a king on his daïs
As I sat up and smoked one evening,
Re-running a long, fast run
We had that day with the Blankshire,
And hoping for future fun.
There is something delightfully pleasing
I think to the most of men,
In sitting at home in the evening
And hunting a hunt again:
So I sat up and smoked a briar,
Till the hour struck twelve o’clock,—
When I noticed my terrier shaking with fright
And there came on the door a knock:
The dog shook like one with the ague,
[Pg 28]
And set up a long, low wail,
As the door opened softly and slowly
And I felt myself growing pale;
For I couldn’t think who could have entered,
This midnight call to make,
And how had they got in the house at all?
And why should the terrier shake?
For the dog was as game as they make ’em,
He had never shown funk before,
I sat still and waited—scarce breathing—
God! What was that at the door!
On the threshold a great, gaunt creature,
Standing some eight feet high,
I never had seen such a thing, nor since,
Nor wish to again till I die,
A thing with a human body
And covered with matted hair,
[Pg 29]
The hair was thin and thro’ it
Great bones were shining bare;
Its arms were long and twisted
And covered with marks of pox,
And instead of a head on its shoulders
Was the mask of a great grey fox.
I gazed on the beast for an instant,
Sweating and trembling with fright,
Then I sprang thro’ the open window,
And hurled myself into the night;
Running I knew not whither,
With the madness of terror, blind,
And I heard the soft tread on the gravel
Of the awful brute behind:
Onward through garden and paddock,
Over walls and fields I raced,
Then I knew in all their horror
The sensations of being chased.
Near it came and nearer,
[Pg 30]
With silent leaps and bounds,
Yes! I felt like the little Red Rover
Running before the hounds!
Till at last I could bear it no longer,
And I sank to the ground in a heap,
Then I saw my dog stretching himself on the mat,
And I found I had been asleep.