Rhymes and Recollections of a Hand-Loom Weaver By William Thom. Edited, with a Biographical Sketch, by W. Skinner |
TO MY SON WILLIE IN THE INFIRMARY |
Rhymes and Recollections of a Hand-Loom Weaver | ||
TO MY SON WILLIE IN THE INFIRMARY
“I shall just mention another incident, though, in point of order, it should have been told before. After many months of hopeless wanderings, my family and I at length found a settled home at Inverury. Comparative rest and warmth succeeding to watchful misery, we were, one and all, afflicted with dishealth. Willie, especially, suffered long, and at last had to be conveyed to the Aberdeen infirmary. There he had to undergo a serious operation. I knew his timid nature, and went thither to sustain and comfort him through that severe trial. The operation took place a day earlier than that mentioned to me, so it was over ere I arrived. I found him asleep in his little chamber, and the feelings of that moment are partially embodied in the following lines:—”
In this homeless house of care?
Lack ye the warmth of a mother's eye
On thy cauldrife lonely lair?
Yet waken thee all alone?
Thy deep dark eye, does it open unblest?
Nor father?—nor sister? None!
For ills like thine to be there;
The comfortless hearth of thy parent is cold,
And his light but the light of despair.
Is the promise of Heaven no more?
Shall Industry weep?—shall the pamper'd suppress
The sweat-earned bread of the poor?
On the famished and houseless then,
Has blighted the bud of my heart's best hope,
And it never may blossom again.
Rhymes and Recollections of a Hand-Loom Weaver | ||