4532041Poems — My Lady's SamplerAntoinette Quinby Scudder
MY LADY'S SAMPLER
Heigh-ho, my winsome Lady—
You're striving hard, I know,
To match your great-grandmother
Who many years ago
A sampler worked in cross-stitch;
It hangs upon the wall
In frame of polished walnut,
Its hues scarce dimmed at all.

She wore her dark hair parted
In neat and glossy bands,
The only jewel that ever
Adorned her pretty hands
Was just a wee gold thimble,
Its rim set round with blue
Forget-me-nots of turquoise,
A gift of lover true.

Your flying fingers sparkle
With diamonds and pearls,
And sure, I think the sun-sprites
That haunt those gleaming curls,
Unless they prove more wary
Than they have been to-day,
In such a golden tangle
Are bound to go astray.

She worked her sampler heedful
Of every stitch and slow,
With purple-breasted peacocks
And fir-trees in a row—
Such tiny trees o'ershadowed
By crimson roses tall,
And lastly, in one corner,
A sprig of heartsease small.

You work such dainty patterns
Of bright-winged butterflies,
Fantastic birds whose plumage
Is of a hundred dyes,
And lovers' knots entwining
Of palest pink and blue,
But ere you've finished, sweetheart,
Oh, work a Heart's-ease, too.