"What can you see in Baby-Land?" Faces pure and bright!" "What do they do in Baby-Land?" "Dream and wake and play, Laugh and crow, "What do they say in Baby-Land?" What a birdie sings!" "Who is the Queen of Baby-Land?" "Mother, kind and sweet; And her love, Born above, Guides the little feet." George Cooper MOTHER'S SONG My heart is like a fountain true That flows and flows with love to you. As chirps the lark unto the tree So chirps my pretty babe to me. And it's O! sweet, sweet! and a lullaby. There's not a rose where'er I seek, And it's O! sweet, sweet! and a lullaby. There's not a star that shines on high, Is brighter than my baby's eye. There's not a boat upon the sea, Can dance as baby does to me. And it's O! sweet, sweet! and a lullaby. No silk was ever spun so fine As is the hair of baby mine. My baby smells more sweet to me Than smells in spring the elder tree. And it's O! sweet, sweet! and a lullaby. A little fish swims in the well, And it's O! sweet, sweet! and a lullaby. The Queen has sceptre, crown and ball, More fair your skin, as white as milk. And it's O! sweet, sweet! and a lullaby. Ten thousand parks where deer do run, Ten thousand pearls beneath the sea, And it's O! sweet, sweet! and a lullaby. Unknown CRADLE SONG SLEEP, little baby of mine, Night and the darkness are near, Through the shadows that frown, Shut, little sleepy blue eyes; Dear little head, be at rest; Was a baby once, too, And slept on His own mother's breast. Sleep, little baby of mine, Soft on your pillow so white; Jesus is here To watch over you, dear, And nothing can harm you to- O, little darling of mine, What can you know of the bliss, The comfort I keep, Awake and asleep, Because I am certain of this? Unknown CRADLE SONG (From "Bitter-Sweet") WHAT is the little one thinking about? Unfathomed mystery! Yet he laughs and cries, and eats and drinks, And chuckles and crows, and nods and winks, As if his head were as full of kinks Where the summers go; He need not laugh, for he 'll find it so! Who can tell what a baby thinks? Out from the shore of the great unknown, Blind, and wailing, and alone, Into the light of day? Out from the shore of the unknown sea, Of the unknown sea that reels and rolls, What does he think of his mother's eyes? What does he think of his mother's hair? What of the cradle-roof that flies Forward and backward through the air? What does he think of his mother's breast, Bare and beautiful, smooth and white, Seeking it ever with fresh delight, Cup of his life, and couch of his rest? What does he think when her quick embrace Of all the birds,— Words she has learned to murmur well? I can see the shadow creep |