Poems Sigourney 1834/Parting of a Mother with her Child

Poems Sigourney 1834 (1834)
by Lydia Sigourney
Parting of a Mother with her Child
4021477Poems Sigourney 1834Parting of a Mother with her Child1834Lydia Sigourney



PARTING OF A MOTHER WITH HER CHILD.


He knew her not, that fair young boy,
    Though cradled on her breast,
He caught his earliest infant smile,
    And nightly sank to rest,
For stern disease had changed the brow
    Once to his gaze so dear,
And to a whisper sunk the voice
    That best he loved to hear.

So, stranger-like, he wondering gazed,
    While wild emotions swell,
As with a deathlike, cold embrace,
    She breathed a last farewell,
And to[1] the Almighty's hand gave back
    The idols of her trust,
And with a joyful hope went down
    To slumber in the dust.

Go, blooming babe, and fondly seek
    The path she trod below,
And, girt with Christian meekness, learn
    To pluck the sting from woe—
That so, to that all-glorious clime,
    Unmarked by pain or care,
Thou, in thy Saviour's strength mayest come
    And know thy mother there.

  1. not of, see errata