Perchance the years have changed her: yet alone This picture lingers: still she seems to me The fair, young Angel of my infancy. Edmund Clarence Stedman MOTHER'S LOVE HE sang so wildly, did the Boy, If 't was a madman's voice you heard, Within his heart did dwell: A bird that dallies with his voice Or on the free blue air his note To pierce, and fall, and rise, and float, None ever was so sweet as he, The boy that wildly sang to me; Though toilsome was the way and long, He led me not to lose the song. But when again we stood below The unhidden sky, his feet Grew slacker, and his note more slow, But more than doubly sweet. He led me then a little way Athwart the barren moor, And then he stayed and bade me stay Beside a cottage door; I could have stayed of mine own will, With the sweet sight which I saw there, A little in the doorway sitting, Oh, what a loveliness her eyes Thomas Burbidge THE WIDOW'S MITE A WIDOW,- she had only one! Though fretful oft, and weak and small, The Widow's Mite-aye, so sustain'd, A little crutch upon the stair Was music to her. I saw her then, and now I see That, though resign'd and cheerful, she Has sorrow'd much: She has, He gave it tenderly, Much faith, and, carefully laid by, A little crutch. Frederick Locker-Lampson THE DAGUERREOTYPE THIS, then, is she, My mother as she looked at seventeen, When she first met my father. Young in credibly, Younger than spring, without the faintest trace Of disappointment, weariness, or tear Those close-wound ropes of pearl (Or common beads made precious by their use) Seem heavy for so slight a throat to wear; Even so, the loops and globes And jet Hung, in the stately way of old, On festivals and Lord's-day of the week, But startling the close gazer with the sense As a moth beats sidewise And up and over, and tries ་ To skirt the irresistible lure Of the flame that has him sure, My spirit, that is none too strong to-day, Pausing to wonder at the perfect lips, But powerless to stem the tide-race bright, The vehement peace which drifts it toward the light Where soon ah, now, with cries Of grief and giving-up unto its gain It shrinks no longer nor denies, But dips Hurriedly home to the exquisite heart of pain, And all is well, for I have seen them plain, We children gathered jealously to share That this should be, even this, The patient head Which suffered years ago the dreary change! |