University of Virginia Library


22

The Sad Mother

O when the half-light weaves
Wild shadows on the floor,
How ghostly come the withered leaves
Stealing about my door!
I sit and hold my breath,
Lone in the lonely house;
Naught breaks the silence still as death,
Only a creeping mouse.
The patter of leaves, it may be,
But liker patter of feet,
The small feet of my own baby
That never felt the heat.

23

The small feet of my son,
Cold as the graveyard sod;
My little, dumb, unchristened one
That may not win to God.
‘Come in, dear babe,’ I cry,
Opening the door so wide.
The leaves go stealing softly by;
How dark it is outside!
And though I kneel and pray
Long on the threshold-stone,
The little feet press on their way,
And I am ever alone.