Hymns for Childhood/The Child's First Grief

For other versions of this work, see The Child's First Grief.
2880077Hymns for Childhood — The Child's First GriefFelicia Hemans


THE CHILD'S FIRST GRIEF.




"Oh! call my brother back to me!
    I cannot play alone;
The summer comes with flower and bee—
    Where is my brother gone?

The butterfly is glancing bright
    Across the sunbeam's track;
I care not now to chase its flight—
    Oh! call my brother back!

The flowers run wild—the flowers we sowed
    Around our garden tree;
Our vine is drooping with its load—
    Oh! call him back to me!"


"He would not hear thy voice, fair child
    He may not come to thee;
The face that once like spring-time smiled,
    On earth no more thou'lt see.

"A rose's brief bright life of joy,
    Such unto him was given;
Go—thou must play alone, my boy!
    Thy brother is in heaven."

"And has he left his birds and flowers;
    And must I call in vain?
And thro' the long, long summer hours,
    Will he not come again?

"And by the brook and in the glade
    Are all our wanderings o'er?
Oh! while my brother with me play'd,
    Would I had lov'd him more!"