The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley in ten volumes |
1. |
2. |
3. |
4. |
5. |
BACK FROM A TWO-YEARS' SENTENCE |
6. |
7. |
8. |
9. |
The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley | ||
1260
BACK FROM A TWO-YEARS' SENTENCE
Back from a two-years' sentence!
And though it had been ten,
You think, I were scarred no deeper
In the eyes of my fellow men.
“My fellow men”?—sounds like a satire,
You think—and I so allow,
Here in my home since childhood,
Yet more than a stranger now!
And though it had been ten,
You think, I were scarred no deeper
In the eyes of my fellow men.
“My fellow men”?—sounds like a satire,
You think—and I so allow,
Here in my home since childhood,
Yet more than a stranger now!
Pardon!—Not wholly a stranger,—
For I have a wife and child:
That woman has wept for two long years,
And yet last night she smiled!—
Smiled, as I leapt from the platform
Of the midnight train, and then—
All that I knew was that smile of hers,
And our babe in my arms again!
For I have a wife and child:
That woman has wept for two long years,
And yet last night she smiled!—
Smiled, as I leapt from the platform
Of the midnight train, and then—
All that I knew was that smile of hers,
And our babe in my arms again!
Back from a two-years' sentence—
But I've thought the whole thing through,—
A hint of it came when the bars swung back
And I looked straight up in the blue
Of the blessed skies with my hat off!
Oho! I've a wife and child:
That woman has wept for two long years,
And yet last night she smiled!
But I've thought the whole thing through,—
A hint of it came when the bars swung back
And I looked straight up in the blue
1261
Oho! I've a wife and child:
That woman has wept for two long years,
And yet last night she smiled!
The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley | ||