Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

The Haunted Chamber

Birds Of Passage. Flight The Third

The Haunted Chamber - meaning Summary

Haunted Rooms of Memory

Longfellow’s "The Haunted Chamber" depicts the mind as a private room where moonlit phantoms of the past appear at night and vanish by day. These spectral memories cluster around a window overlooking a pine and the grave of a child, linking personal grief and unresolved loss. The poem equates these night visions with motionless statues spanning the "silent river of death," suggesting memory’s frozen, bridge-like hold between life and loss.

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Each heart has its haunted chamber, Where the silent moonlight falls! On the floor are mysterious footsteps, There are whispers along the walls! And mine at times is haunted By phantoms of the Past As motionless as shadows By the silent moonlight cast. A form sits by the window, That is not seen by day, For as soon as the dawn approaches It vanishes away. It sits there in the moonlight Itself as pale and still, And points with its airy finger Across the window-sill. Without before the window, There stands a gloomy pine, Whose boughs wave upward and downward As wave these thoughts of mine. And underneath its branches Is the grave of a little child, Who died upon life's threshold, And never wept nor smiled. What are ye, O pallid phantoms! That haunt my troubled brain? That vanish when day approaches, And at night return again? What are ye, O pallid phantoms! But the statues without breath, That stand on the bridge overarching The silent river of death?

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