Mother's Loss
If I could clasp my little babe
Upon my breast to-night,
I would not mind the blowing wind
That shrieketh in affright.
Oh, my lost babe! my little babe,
My babe with dreamful eyes;
Thy bed is cold; and night wind bold
Shrieks woeful lullabies.
My breast is softer than the sod;
This room, with lighter hearth,
Is better place for thy sweet face
Than frozen mother eatrth.
Oh, my babe! oh, my lost babe!
Oh, babe with waxen hands,
I want thee so, I need thee so -
Come from thy mystic lands!
No love that, like a mother's fills
Each corner of the heart;
No loss like hers, that rends, and chills,
And tears the soul apart.
Oh, babe - my babe, my helpless babe!
I miss thy little form.
Would I might creep where thou dost sleep,
And clasp thee through the storm.
I hold thy pillow to my breast,
To bring a vague relief;
I sing the songs that soothed thy rest -
Ah me! no cheating grief.
My breathing babe! my sobbing babe!
I miss thy plaintive moan,
I cannot hear - thou art not near -
My little one, my own.
Thy father sleeps. He mourns thy loss,
But little fathers know
The pain that makes a mother toss
Through sleepless nights of woe.
My clinging babe! my nursing babe!
What knows thy father - man -
How my breasts miss thy lips' soft kiss -
None but a mother can.
Worn out, I sleep; I wake - I weep -
I sleep - hush, hush, my dear;
Sweet lamb, fear not - Oh, God! I thought -
I thought my babe was here.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
D'autres poésies de Ella Wheeler Wilcox
"It Might Have Been"
We will be what we could be. Do not say,
"It might have...
A Baby In The House
I knew that a baby was hid in that house,
Though I saw...
A Fallen Leaf
A trusting little leaf of green,
A bold audacious frost;...
A Fatal Impress
A little leaf just in the forest's edge,
All summer long,...
A Golden Day
The subtle beauty of this day
Hangs o'er me like a fairy...
A Grey Mood
As we hurry away to the end, my friend,
Of this sad...
A Holiday
The Wife
The house is like a garden,
The children...
A Leaf
Somebody said, in the crowd, last eve,
That you were...
A Lovers' Quarrel
We two were lovers, the Sea and I;
We plighted our troth...
A Maiden To Her Mirror
He said he loved me! Then he called my hair
Silk threads...
Précédentes poésies
Women
My three sisters are sitting
on rocks of black...
Victory
Something spreading underground won't speak to us
under...
Two Songs
1.
Sex, as they harshly call it,
I fell into...
Stepping Backward
Good-by to you whom I shall see tomorrow,
Next year and...
Snapshots of a Daughter-in-Law
1
You, once a belle in Shreveport,
with...

