<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> THE VERSE-BOOK OF<br/> A HOMELY WOMAN </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Fay Inchfawn </h2>
<h3> [Elizabeth Rebecca Ward] </h3>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PART1"> <b>PART I. INDOORS</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> The Long View </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> Within my House </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> The Housewife </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> To Mother </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> In Such an Hour </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> The Daily Interview </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> The Little House </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> The House-Mother </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> A Woman in Hospital </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> In Convalescence </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> Homesick </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> On Washing Day </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> When Baby Strayed </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> If Only —— </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> Listening </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> The Reason </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> Two Women </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> The Prize Fight </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> The Home Lights </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> To an Old Teapot </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> For Mothering! </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> Little Fan </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> The Naughty Day </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> To a Little White Bird </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> Because </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> When He Comes </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PART2"> <b>PART II. OUT OF DOORS</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029"> Early Spring </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030"> The Witness </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0031"> In Somerset </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032"> At the Cross Roads </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033"> Summer met Me </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0034"> The Carrier </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0035"> The Thrush </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0036"> In Dorset Dear </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0037"> The Flight of the Fairies </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0038"> The Street Player </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0039"> On All Souls' Eve </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0040"> The Log Fire </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0041"> God save the King </SPAN></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/> <br/> Dedicated<br/><br/> TO<br/><br/> MY FIRST LOVE, MY MOTHER
<br/> <br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART1" id="link2H_PART1"></SPAN></p>
<h2> PART I. INDOORS </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Long View </h2>
<p>Some day of days! Some dawning<br/>
yet to be<br/>
I shall be clothed with immortality!<br/>
<br/>
And, in that day, I shall not greatly care<br/>
That Jane spilt candle grease upon the<br/>
stair.<br/>
<br/>
It will not grieve me then, as once it did,<br/>
That careless hands have chipped my<br/>
teapot lid.<br/>
<br/>
I groan, being burdened. But, in that<br/>
glad day,<br/>
I shall forget vexations of the way.<br/>
<br/>
That needs were often great, when means<br/>
were small,<br/>
Will not perplex me any more at all<br/>
A few short years at most (it may be less),<br/>
I shall have done with earthly storm and<br/>
stress.<br/>
<br/>
So, for this day, I lay me at Thy feet.<br/>
O, keep me sweet, my Master! Keep<br/>
me sweet!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Within my House </h2>
<p>First, there's the entrance, narrow,<br/>
and so small,<br/>
The hat-stand seems to fill the tiny hall;<br/>
That staircase, too, has such an awkward<br/>
bend,<br/>
The carpet rucks, and rises up on end!<br/>
Then, all the rooms are cramped and close<br/>
together;<br/>
And there's a musty smell in rainy weather.<br/>
Yes, and it makes the daily work go hard<br/>
To have the only tap across a yard.<br/>
These creaking doors, these draughts, this<br/>
battered paint,<br/>
Would try, I think, the temper of a saint,<br/>
<br/>
How often had I railed against these<br/>
things,<br/>
With envies, and with bitter murmurings<br/>
For spacious rooms, and sunny garden<br/>
plots!<br/>
Until one day,<br/>
Washing the breakfast dishes, so I think,<br/>
I paused a moment in my work to pray;<br/>
And then and there<br/>
All life seemed suddenly made new and<br/>
fair;<br/>
For, like the Psalmist's dove among the<br/>
pots<br/>
(Those endless pots, that filled the tiny<br/>
sink!),<br/>
My spirit found her wings.<br/>
<br/>
"Lord" (thus I prayed), "it matters not<br/>
at all<br/>
That my poor home is ill-arranged and<br/>
small:<br/>
I, not the house, am straitened; Lord,<br/>
'tis I!<br/>
Enlarge my foolish heart, that by-and-by<br/>
I may look up with such a radiant face<br/>
Thou shalt have glory even in this place.<br/>
And when I trip, or stumble unawares<br/>
In carrying water up these awkward stairs,<br/>
Then keep me sweet, and teach me day<br/>
by day<br/>
To tread with patience Thy appointed<br/>
way.<br/>
As for the house . . . . Lord, let it be<br/>
my part<br/>
To walk within it with a perfect heart."<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Housewife </h2>
<p>See, I am cumbered, Lord,<br/>
With serving, and with small vexa-<br/>
tious things.<br/>
Upstairs, and down, my feet<br/>
Must hasten, sure and fleet.<br/>
So weary that I cannot heed Thy word;<br/>
So tired, I cannot now mount up with<br/>
wings.<br/>
I wrestle—how I wrestle!—through the<br/>
hours.<br/>
Nay, not with principalities, nor powers—<br/>
Dark spiritual foes of God's and man's—<br/>
But with antagonistic pots and pans:<br/>
With footmarks in the hall,<br/>
With smears upon the wall,<br/>
With doubtful ears, and small unwashen<br/>
hands,<br/>
And with a babe's innumerable demands.<br/>
<br/>
I toil with feverish haste, while tear-drops<br/>
glisten,<br/>
<br/>
(O, child of mine, be still. And listen—<br/>
listen!)<br/>
<br/>
At last, I laid aside<br/>
Important work, no other hands could do<br/>
So well (I thought), no skill contrive so<br/>
true.<br/>
And with my heart's door open—open<br/>
wide—<br/>
With leisured feet, and idle hands, I sat.<br/>
I, foolish, fussy, blind as any bat,<br/>
Sat down to listen, and to learn. And lo,<br/>
My thousand tasks were done the better so.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> To Mother </h2>
<p>I would that you should know,<br/>
Dear mother, that I love you—love<br/>
you so!<br/>
That I remember other days and years;<br/>
Remember childish joys and childish fears.<br/>
And this, because my baby's little hand<br/>
Opened my own heart's door and made<br/>
me understand.<br/>
<br/>
I wonder how you could<br/>
Be always kind and good!<br/>
So quick to hear; to tend<br/>
My smallest ills; to lend<br/>
Such sympathising ears<br/>
Swifter than ancient seer's.<br/>
I never yet knew hands so soft and kind,<br/>
Nor any cheek so smooth, nor any mind<br/>
So full of tender thoughts. . . . Dear<br/>
mother, now<br/>
I think that I can guess a little how<br/>
You must have looked for some response,<br/>
some sign,<br/>
That all my tiresome wayward heart was<br/>
thine.<br/>
<br/>
And sure it was! You were my first dear<br/>
love!<br/>
You who first pointed me to God above;<br/>
You who seemed hearkening to my lightest<br/>
word,<br/>
And in the dark night seasons always<br/>
heard<br/>
When I came trembling, knocking at your<br/>
door.<br/>
Forgive me, mother, if my whims outwore<br/>
Your patient heart. Or if in later days<br/>
I sought out foolish unfamiliar ways;<br/>
If ever, mother dear, I loosed my hold<br/>
Of your loved hand; or, headstrong,<br/>
thought you cold,<br/>
Forgive me, mother! Oh, forgive me,<br/>
dear!<br/>
I am come back at last—you see me<br/>
here,<br/>
Your loving child. . . . And, mother,<br/>
on my knee<br/>
I pray that thus my child may think of<br/>
me!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> In Such an Hour </h2>
<p>Sometimes, when everything goes<br/>
wrong:<br/>
When days are short, and nights are long;<br/>
When wash-day brings so dull a sky<br/>
That not a single thing will dry.<br/>
And when the kitchen chimney smokes,<br/>
And when there's naught so "queer" as<br/>
folks!<br/>
When friends deplore my faded youth,<br/>
And when the baby cuts a tooth.<br/>
While John, the baby last but one,<br/>
Clings round my skirts till day is done;<br/>
When fat, good-tempered Jane is glum,<br/>
And butcher's man forgets to come.<br/>
<br/>
Sometimes, I say, on days like these,<br/>
I get a sudden gleam of bliss.<br/>
"Not on some sunny day of ease,<br/>
He'll come . . but on a day like this!"<br/>
And, in the twinkling of an eye,<br/>
These tiresome things will all go by!<br/>
<br/>
And, 'tis a curious thing, but Jane<br/>
Is sure, just then, to smile again;<br/>
Or, out the truant sun will peep,<br/>
And both the babies fall asleep.<br/>
The fire burns up with roar sublime,<br/>
And butcher's man is just in time.<br/>
And oh! My feeble faith grows strong<br/>
Sometimes, when everything goes wrong!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Daily Interview </h2>
<p>Such a sensation Sunday's preacher<br/>
made.<br/>
"Christian!" he cried, "what is your stock-<br/>
in-trade?<br/>
Alas! Too often nil. No time to pray;<br/>
No interview with Christ from day to day,<br/>
A hurried prayer, maybe, just gabbled<br/>
through;<br/>
A random text—for any one will do."<br/>
Then gently, lovingly, with look intense,<br/>
He leaned towards us—<br/>
"Is this common sense?<br/>
No person in his rightful mind will try<br/>
To run his business so, lest by-and-by<br/>
The thing collapses, smirching his good<br/>
name,<br/>
And he, insolvent, face the world with<br/>
shame."<br/>
<br/>
I heard it all; and something inly said<br/>
That all was true. The daily toil and press<br/>
Had crowded out my hopes of holiness.<br/>
Still, my old self rose, reasoning:<br/>
How can you,<br/>
With strenuous work to do—<br/>
Real slogging work—say, how can you<br/>
keep pace<br/>
With leisured folks? Why, you could<br/>
grow in grace<br/>
If you had time . . . the daily Interview<br/>
Was never meant for those who wash and<br/>
bake.<br/>
<br/>
But yet a small Voice whispered:<br/>
"For My sake<br/>
Keep tryst with Me!<br/>
There are so many minutes in a day,<br/>
So spare Me ten.<br/>
It shall be proven, then,<br/>
Ten minutes set apart can well repay<br/>
You shall accomplish more<br/>
If you will shut your door<br/>
For ten short minutes just to watch and<br/>
pray."<br/>
<br/>
"Lord, if I do<br/>
Set ten apart for You"<br/>
(I dared, yes dared, to reason thus with<br/>
Him)<br/>
"The baker's sure to come;<br/>
Or Jane will call<br/>
To say some visitor is in the hall;<br/>
Or I shall smell the porridge burning, yes,<br/>
And run to stop it in my hastiness.<br/>
There's not ten minutes, Lord, in all the<br/>
day<br/>
I can be sure of peace in which to watch<br/>
and pray."<br/>
<br/>
But all that night,<br/>
With calm insistent might,<br/>
That gentle Voice spake softly, lovingly—<br/>
"Keep tryst with Me!<br/>
You have devised a dozen different ways<br/>
Of getting easy meals on washing days;<br/>
You spend much anxious thought on<br/>
hopeless socks;<br/>
On moving ironmould from tiny frocks;<br/>
'Twas you who found<br/>
A way to make the sugar lumps go round;<br/>
You, who invented ways and means of<br/>
making<br/>
Nice spicy buns for tea, hot from the baking,<br/>
When margarine was short . . . and can-<br/>
not you<br/>
Who made the time to join the butter queue<br/>
Make time again for Me?<br/>
Yes, will you not, with all your daily<br/>
striving,<br/>
Use woman's wit in scheming and con-<br/>
triving<br/>
To keep that tryst with Me?"<br/>
<br/>
Like ice long bound<br/>
On powdered frosty ground,<br/>
My erring will all suddenly gave way.<br/>
The kind soft wind of His sweet pleading<br/>
blew,<br/>
And swiftly, silently, before I knew,<br/>
The warm love loosed and ran.<br/>
Life-giving floods began,<br/>
And so most lovingly I answered Him:<br/>
"Lord, yes, I will, and can.<br/>
I will keep tryst with Thee, Lord, come<br/>
what may!"<br/>
<br/>
ENVOY.<br/>
<br/>
It is a wondrous and surprising thing<br/>
How that ten minutes takes the piercing<br/>
sting<br/>
From vexing circumstance and poison-<br/>
ous dart<br/>
Hurled by the enemy straight at my<br/>
heart.<br/>
So, to the woman tempest-tossed and<br/>
tried<br/>
By household cares, and hosts of things<br/>
beside,<br/>
With all my strength God bids me say<br/>
to you:<br/>
"Dear soul, do try the daily Interview!"<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Little House </h2>
<p>One yestereve, in the waning light,<br/>
When the wind was still and the<br/>
gloaming bright,<br/>
There came a breath from a far countrie,<br/>
And the ghost of a Little House called<br/>
to me.<br/>
<br/>
"Have you forgotten me?" "No!" I cried.<br/>
"Your hall was as narrow as this is wide,<br/>
Your roof was leaky, the rain came<br/>
through<br/>
Till a ceiling fell, on my new frock too!<br/>
<br/>
"In your parlour flooring a loose board hid,<br/>
And wore the carpet, you know it did!<br/>
Your kitchen was small, and the shelves<br/>
were few,<br/>
While the fireplace smoked—and you<br/>
know it's true!"<br/>
<br/>
The little ghost sighed: "Do you quite<br/>
forget<br/>
My window boxes of mignonette?<br/>
And the sunny room where you used to<br/>
sew<br/>
When a great hope came to you, long ago?<br/>
<br/>
"Ah, me! How you used to watch the<br/>
door<br/>
Where a latch-key turned on the stroke<br/>
of four.<br/>
And you made the tea, and you poured<br/>
it out<br/>
From an old brown pot with a broken<br/>
spout<br/>
<br/>
"Now, times have changed. And your<br/>
footman waits<br/>
With the silver urn, and the fluted plates.<br/>
But the little blind Love with the wings,<br/>
has flown,<br/>
Who used to sit by your warm hearth-<br/>
stone."<br/>
<br/>
The little ghost paused. Then "Away!"<br/>
I said.<br/>
"Back to your place with the quiet dead.<br/>
Back to your place, lest my servants see,<br/>
That the ghost of a Little House calls<br/>
to me."<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The House-Mother </h2>
<p>Across the town the evening bell is<br/>
ringing;<br/>
Clear comes the call, through kitchen<br/>
windows winging!<br/>
<br/>
Lord, knowing Thou art kind,<br/>
I heed Thy call to prayer.<br/>
I have a soul to save;<br/>
A heart which needs, I think, a double<br/>
share<br/>
Of sweetnesses which noble ladies crave.<br/>
Hope, faith and diligence, and patient<br/>
care,<br/>
With meekness, grace, and lowliness of<br/>
mind.<br/>
Lord, wilt Thou grant all these<br/>
To one who prays, but cannot sit at ease?<br/>
<br/>
They do not know,<br/>
The passers-by, who go<br/>
Up to Thy house, with saintly faces set;<br/>
Who throng about Thy seat,<br/>
And sing Thy praises sweet,<br/>
Till vials full of odours cloud Thy feet;<br/>
They do not know . . .<br/>
And, if they knew, then would they greatly<br/>
care<br/>
That Thy tired handmaid washed the<br/>
children's hair;<br/>
Or, with red roughened hands, scoured<br/>
dishes well,<br/>
While through the window called the<br/>
evening bell?<br/>
And that her seeking soul looks upward<br/>
yet,<br/>
THEY do not know . . . but THOU wilt<br/>
not forget<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"></SPAN></p>
<h2> A Woman in Hospital </h2>
<p>I know it all . . . I know.<br/>
For I am God. I am Jehovah, He<br/>
Who made you what you are; and I can<br/>
see<br/>
The tears that wet your pillow night by<br/>
night,<br/>
When nurse has lowered that too-brilliant<br/>
light;<br/>
When the talk ceases, and the ward grows<br/>
still,<br/>
And you have doffed your will:<br/>
I know the anguish and the helplessness.<br/>
I know the fears that toss you to and fro.<br/>
And how you wrestle, weariful,<br/>
With hosts of little strings that pull<br/>
About your heart, and tear it so.<br/>
I know.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, do You know<br/>
I had no time to put clean curtains up;<br/>
No time to finish darning all the socks;<br/>
Nor sew clean frilling in the children's<br/>
frocks?<br/>
And do You know about my Baby's cold?<br/>
And how things are with my sweet three-<br/>
year-old?<br/>
Will Jane remember right<br/>
Their cough mixture at night?<br/>
And will she ever think<br/>
To brush the kitchen flues, or scrub the<br/>
sink?<br/>
<br/>
And then, there's John! Poor tired<br/>
lonely John!<br/>
No one will run to put his slippers on.<br/>
And not a soul but me<br/>
Knows just exactly how he likes his tea.<br/>
It rends my heart to think I cannot go<br/>
And minister to him. . . .<br/>
<br/>
I know. I know.<br/>
<br/>
Then, there are other things,<br/>
Dear Lord . . . more little strings<br/>
That pull my heart. Now Baby feels her<br/>
feet<br/>
She loves to run outside into the street<br/>
And Jane's hands are so full, she'll never<br/>
see. . . .<br/>
And I'm quite sure the clean clothes won't<br/>
be aired—<br/>
At least, not properly.<br/>
And, oh, I can't, I really can't be spared—<br/>
My little house calls so!<br/>
<br/>
I know.<br/>
And I am waiting here to help and bless.<br/>
Lay down your head. Lay down your hope-<br/>
lessness<br/>
And let Me speak.<br/>
You are so weary, child, you are so weak.<br/>
But let us reason out<br/>
The darkness and the doubt;<br/>
This torturing fear that tosses you about.<br/>
<br/>
I hold the universe. I count the stars.<br/>
And out of shortened lives I build the<br/>
ages. . . .<br/>
<br/>
But, Lord, while such high things Thy<br/>
thought engages,<br/>
I fear—forgive me—lest<br/>
Amid those limitless eternal spaces<br/>
Thou shouldest, in the high and heavenly<br/>
places,<br/>
Pass over my affairs as things of nought.<br/>
There are so many houses just like mine.<br/>
And I so earth-bound, and Thyself Divine.<br/>
It seems impossible that Thou shouldst<br/>
care<br/>
Just what my babies wear;<br/>
And what John gets to eat; . . . and<br/>
can it be<br/>
A circumstance of great concern to Thee<br/>
Whether I live or die?<br/>
<br/>
Have you forgotten then, My child, that I,<br/>
The Infinite, the Limitless, laid down<br/>
The method of existence that I knew,<br/>
And took on Me a nature just like you?<br/>
I laboured day by day<br/>
In the same dogged way<br/>
That you have tackled household tasks.<br/>
And then,<br/>
Remember, child, remember once again<br/>
Your own beloveds . . . did you really<br/>
think—<br/>
(Those days you toiled to get their meat<br/>
and drink,<br/>
And made their clothes, and tried to under-<br/>
stand<br/>
Their little ailments)—did you think your<br/>
hand,<br/>
Your feeble hand, was keeping them from ill?<br/>
I gave them life, and life is more than meat;<br/>
Those little limbs, so comely and so sweet.<br/>
You can make raiment for them, and are glad,<br/>
But can you add<br/>
One cubit to their stature? Yet they grow!<br/>
Oh, child, hands off! Hands off! And<br/>
leave them so.<br/>
I guarded hitherto, I guard them still.<br/>
<br/>
I have let go at last. I have let go.<br/>
And, oh, the rest it is, dear God, to know<br/>
My dear ones are so safe, for Thou wilt<br/>
keep.<br/>
Hands off, at last! Now, I can go to<br/>
sleep.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<h2> In Convalescence </h2>
<p>Not long ago, I prayed for dying<br/>
grace,<br/>
For then I thought to see Thee face to<br/>
face.<br/>
<br/>
And now I ask (Lord, 'tis a weakling's<br/>
cry)<br/>
That Thou wilt give me grace to live, not<br/>
die.<br/>
<br/>
Such foolish prayers! I know. Yet<br/>
pray I must.<br/>
Lord help me—help me not to see the<br/>
dust!<br/>
<br/>
And not to nag, nor fret because the blind<br/>
Hangs crooked, and the curtain sags be-<br/>
hind.<br/>
<br/>
But, oh! The kitchen cupboards! What a<br/>
sight!<br/>
'T'will take at least a month to get them<br/>
right.<br/>
<br/>
And that last cocoa had a smoky taste,<br/>
And all the milk has boiled away to waste!<br/>
<br/>
And—no, I resolutely will not think<br/>
About the saucepans, nor about the sink.<br/>
<br/>
These light afflictions are but temporal<br/>
things—<br/>
To rise above them, wilt Thou lend me<br/>
wings?<br/>
<br/>
Then I shall smile when Jane, with towzled<br/>
hair<br/>
(And lumpy gruel!), clatters up the stair.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Homesick </h2>
<p>I shut my eyes to rest 'em, just a bit<br/>
ago it seems,<br/>
An' back among the Cotswolds I were<br/>
wanderin' in me dreams.<br/>
I saw the old grey homestead, with the<br/>
rickyard set around,<br/>
An' catched the lowin' of the herd, a<br/>
pleasant, homelike sound.<br/>
Then on I went a-singin', through the<br/>
pastures where the sheep<br/>
Was lyin' underneath the elms, a-tryin' for<br/>
to sleep.<br/>
<br/>
An' where the stream was tricklin' by, half<br/>
stifled by the grass,<br/>
Heaped over thick with buttercups, I saw<br/>
the corncrake pass.<br/>
For 'twas Summer, Summer, SUMMER!<br/>
An' the blue forget-me-nots<br/>
Wiped out this dusty city and the smoky<br/>
chimbley pots.<br/>
I clean forgot My Lady's gown, the<br/>
dazzlin' sights I've seen;<br/>
I was back among the Cotswolds, where<br/>
me heart has always been.<br/>
<br/>
Then through the sixteen-acre on I went,<br/>
a stiffish climb,<br/>
Right to the bridge, where all our sheep<br/>
comes up at shearin' time.<br/>
There was the wild briar roses hangin'<br/>
down so pink an' sweet,<br/>
A-droppin' o' their fragrance on the clover<br/>
at my feet<br/>
An' here me heart stopped beatin', for<br/>
down by Gatcombe's Wood<br/>
My lad was workin' with his team, as only<br/>
my lad could!<br/>
<br/>
"COME BACK!" was what the tricklin' brook<br/>
an' breezes seemed to say.<br/>
"'TIS LONESOME ON THE COTSWOLDS NOW THAT<br/>
MARY DREW'S AWAY."<br/>
<br/>
An' back again I'm goin' (for me wages<br/>
has been paid,<br/>
An' they're lookin' through the papers for<br/>
another kitchen maid).<br/>
Back to the old grey homestead, an' the<br/>
uplands cool an' green,<br/>
To my lad among the Cotswolds, where<br/>
me heart has always been!<br/></p>
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<h2> On Washing Day </h2>
<p>"I'm going to gran'ma's for a bit<br/>
My mother's got the copper lit;<br/>
An' piles of clothes are on the floor,<br/>
An' steam comes out the wash-house door;<br/>
An' Mrs. Griggs has come, an' she<br/>
Is just as cross as she can be.<br/>
She's had her lunch, and ate a lot;<br/>
I saw her squeeze the coffee-pot.<br/>
An' when I helped her make the starch,<br/>
She said: 'Now, Miss, you just quick<br/>
march!<br/>
What? Touch them soap-suds if you<br/>
durst;<br/>
I'll see you in the blue-bag first!'<br/>
An' mother dried my frock, an' said:<br/>
'Come back in time to go to bed.'<br/>
I'm off to gran'ma's, for, you see,<br/>
At home, they can't put up with me.<br/>
<br/>
"But down at gran'ma's 'tis so nice.<br/>
If gran'ma's making currant-cake,<br/>
She'll let me put the ginger spice,<br/>
An' grease the tin, an' watch it bake;<br/>
An' then she says she thinks it fun<br/>
To taste the edges when it's done.<br/>
<br/>
"That's gran'ma's house. Why, hip,<br/>
hooray!<br/>
My gran'ma's got a washing day;<br/>
For gran'pa's shirts are on the line,<br/>
An' stockings, too—six, seven, eight, nine!<br/>
She'll let me help her. Yes, she'll tie<br/>
Her apron round to keep me dry;<br/>
An' on her little stool I'll stand<br/>
Up to the wash-tub. 'Twill be grand!<br/>
There's no cross Mrs. Griggs to say,<br/>
'Young Miss is always in the way.'<br/>
An' me and gran'ma will have tea<br/>
At dinner-time—just her an' me—<br/>
An' eggs, I 'spect, an' treacle rice.<br/>
My goodness! Won't it all be nice?<br/>
<br/>
"Gran'ma, I'm come to spend the day,<br/>
'Cause mother finds me in the way.<br/>
Gran'ma, I'll peg the hankies out;<br/>
Gran'ma, I'll stir the starch about;<br/>
Gran'ma, I'm come, because, you see,<br/>
At home, they can't put up with me."<br/></p>
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<h2> When Baby Strayed </h2>
<p>When Baby strayed, it seemed to<br/>
me,<br/>
Sun, moon and stars waned suddenly.<br/>
<br/>
At once, with frenzied haste, my feet<br/>
Ran up and down the busy street.<br/>
<br/>
If ever in my life I prayed,<br/>
It was the evening Baby strayed.<br/>
<br/>
And yet my great concern was this<br/>
(Not dread of losing Baby's kiss,<br/>
<br/>
And Baby's soft small hand in mine,<br/>
And Baby's comradeship divine),<br/>
<br/>
'Twas BABY'S terror, BABY'S fears!<br/>
Whose hand but mine could dry her<br/>
tears?<br/>
<br/>
I without Baby? In my need<br/>
I were a piteous soul indeed.<br/>
<br/>
But piteous far, beyond all other,<br/>
A little child without a mother.<br/>
<br/>
And God, in mercy, graciously<br/>
Gave my lost darling back to me.<br/>
<br/>
O high and lofty One!<br/>
THOU couldst have lived to all eternity<br/>
Apart from ME!<br/>
In majesty, upon that emerald throne.<br/>
Thou, with Thy morning stars,<br/>
Thy dawns, with golden bars,<br/>
And all the music of the heavenly train.<br/>
Possessing all things, what hadst Thou to<br/>
gain<br/>
By seeking me?<br/>
What was I? . . . and, what am I? . . .<br/>
less than nought.<br/>
And yet Thy mercy sought.<br/>
Yea, Thou hast set my feet<br/>
Upon the way of holiness, and sweet<br/>
It is, to seek Thee daily, unafraid . . .<br/>
<br/>
But (this I learnt the night that Baby<br/>
strayed)<br/>
Here was Thy chief, Thy great concern<br/>
for me:<br/>
My desolate estate, apart from Thee!<br/></p>
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<h2> If Only —— </h2>
<p>If only dinner cooked itself,<br/>
And groceries grew upon the shelf;<br/>
If children did as they were told,<br/>
And never had a cough or cold;<br/>
And washed their hands, and wiped their<br/>
boots,<br/>
And never tore their Sunday suits,<br/>
But always tidied up the floor,<br/>
Nor once forgot to shut the door.<br/>
<br/>
If John remembered not to throw<br/>
His papers on the ground. And oh!<br/>
If he would put his pipes away,<br/>
And shake the ashes on the tray<br/>
Instead of on the floor close by;<br/>
And always spread his towel to dry,<br/>
And hung his hat upon the peg,<br/>
And never had bones in his leg.<br/>
<br/>
Then, there's another thing. If Jane<br/>
Would put the matches back again<br/>
Just where she found them, it would be<br/>
A save of time to her and me.<br/>
And if she never did forget<br/>
To put the dustbin out; nor yet<br/>
Contrive to gossip with the baker,<br/>
Nor need ten thunderbolts to wake her.<br/>
<br/>
Ahem! If wishes all came true,<br/>
I don't know what I'd find to do,<br/>
Because if no one made a mess<br/>
There'd be no need of cleanliness.<br/>
And things might work so blissfully,<br/>
In time—who knows?—they'd not need<br/>
me!<br/>
<br/>
And this being so, I fancy whether<br/>
I'll go on keeping things together.<br/></p>
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<h2> Listening </h2>
<p>His step? Ah, no; 'tis but the rain<br/>
That hurtles on the window pane.<br/>
Let's draw the curtains close and sit<br/>
Beside the fire awhile and knit.<br/>
Two purl—two plain. A well-shaped<br/>
sock,<br/>
And warm. (I thought I heard a knock,<br/>
But 'twas the slam of Jones's door.)<br/>
Yes, good Scotch yarn is far before<br/>
The fleecy wools—a different thing,<br/>
And best for wear. (Was that his ring?)<br/>
No. 'Tis the muffin man I see;<br/>
We'll have threepennyworth for tea.<br/>
Two plain—two purl; that heel is neat.<br/>
(I hear his step far down the street.)<br/>
Two purl—two plain. The sock can<br/>
wait;<br/>
I'll make the tea. (He's at the gate!)<br/></p>
<p>The Dear Folks in<br/>
Devon<br/>
<br/>
Back in the dear old country 'tis Christ-<br/>
mas, and to-night<br/>
I'm thinking of the mistletoe and holly<br/>
berries bright.<br/>
The smoke above our chimbley pots I'd<br/>
dearly love to see,<br/>
And those dear folks down in Devon,<br/>
how they'll talk and think of me.<br/>
<br/>
Owd Ben'll bring the letters, Christmas<br/>
morn, and if there's one<br/>
As comes across from Canada straight<br/>
from their absent son,<br/>
My Mother's hands'll tremble, and my<br/>
Dad'll likely say:<br/>
"Don't seem like Christmas time no more,<br/>
with our dear lad away."<br/>
<br/>
I can see 'em carve the Christmas beef,<br/>
and Brother Jimmy's wife<br/>
Will say her never tasted such, no, not in<br/>
all her life.<br/>
And Sister Martha's Christmas pies melt<br/>
in your mouth, 'tis true,<br/>
But 'twas Mother made the puddin', as<br/>
mothers always do!<br/>
<br/>
Ah me! If I could just have wings, and<br/>
in the dimsey light<br/>
Go stealing up the cobbled path this<br/>
lonesome Christmas night,<br/>
Lift up the latch with gentle hand—My!<br/>
What a shout there'd be!<br/>
From those dear folks down in Devon!<br/>
What a welcomin' for me!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Reason </h2>
<p>"Why shouldest Thou be as a wayfaring man, that<br/>
turneth aside to tarry for a night?"—Jer. xiv. 8.<br/>
<br/>
Nay, do not get the venison pasty<br/>
out;<br/>
I shall not greatly put myself about<br/>
Hungry, he may be; yes, and we shall<br/>
spare<br/>
Some bread and cheese, 'tis truly whole-<br/>
some fare.<br/>
We have to-morrow's dinner still to find;<br/>
It's well for you I have a frugal mind.<br/>
<br/>
Not the best bed! No, no. Whatever<br/>
next?<br/>
Why with such questionings should I be<br/>
vext?<br/>
The man is naught to us; why should<br/>
we care?<br/>
The little attic room will do; 'tis bare,<br/>
But he'll be gone before to-morrow's light;<br/>
He has but come to tarry for a night.<br/>
<br/>
I shall not speak with him. Oh, no, not I,<br/>
Lest I should pity overmuch, or buy<br/>
Some paltry ware of his. Nay, I'll to<br/>
bed,<br/>
And he can sup alone, well warmed and<br/>
fed;<br/>
'Tis much to take him in a night like this.<br/>
Why should I fret me with concerns of<br/>
his?<br/>
<br/>
Grey morning came, and at the break of<br/>
day<br/>
The Man rose up and went upon his way<br/></p>
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<h2> Two Women </h2>
<p>"I beseech Euodias, and beseech Syntyche, that they<br/>
be of the same mind in the Lord"—Phil. iv. 2,<br/>
<br/>
EUODIAS.<br/>
<br/>
But if Paul heard her tattlings, I am<br/>
sure<br/>
He never would expect me to endure.<br/>
There is a something in her very face<br/>
Antagonistic to the work of grace.<br/>
And even when I would speak graciously<br/>
Somehow, Syntyche's manner ruffles me.<br/>
<br/>
SYNTYCHE.<br/>
<br/>
No, not for worlds! Euodias has no<br/>
mind;<br/>
So slow she is, so spiritually blind.<br/>
Her tongue is quite unbridled, yet she<br/>
says<br/>
She grieves to see my aggravating ways<br/>
Ah, no one but myself knows perfectly<br/>
How odious Euodias can be!<br/>
<br/>
EUODIAS.<br/>
<br/>
Yet, "in the Lord." Ah, that's another<br/>
thing!<br/>
<br/>
SYNTYCHE.<br/>
<br/>
Yet, "in the Lord." That alters it in-<br/>
deed.<br/>
<br/>
EUODIAS.<br/>
<br/>
For His sake I'll endure her whispering<br/>
<br/>
SYNTYCHE.<br/>
<br/>
For His sake I'll consent to let her lead.<br/>
<br/>
EUODIAS.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, teach me to forbear; yes, day by<br/>
day.<br/>
<br/>
SYNTYCHE.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, keep me gentle now, and all the<br/>
way.<br/></p>
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<h2> The Prize Fight </h2>
<p>"I am a boxer, who does not inflict blows on the air,<br/>
but I hit hard and straight at my own body."—1 Cor.<br/>
ix. 26 (WEYMOUTH'S Translation).<br/>
<br/>
'T'was breakfast time, and outside in<br/>
the street<br/>
The factory men went by with hurrying<br/>
feet.<br/>
And on the bridge, in dim December light,<br/>
The newsboys shouted of the great prize<br/>
fight.<br/>
Then, as I dished the bacon, and served<br/>
out<br/>
The porridge, all our youngsters gave<br/>
a shout.<br/>
The letter-box had clicked, and through<br/>
the din<br/>
The Picture News was suddenly pushed in.<br/>
<br/>
John showed the lads the pictures, and<br/>
explained<br/>
Just how the fight took place, and what<br/>
was gained<br/>
By that slim winner. Then, he looked at me<br/>
As I sat, busy, pouring out the tea:<br/>
"Your mother is a boxer, rightly styled.<br/>
She hits the air sometimes, though," and<br/>
John smiled.<br/>
"Yet she fights on." Young Jack, with<br/>
widened eyes<br/>
Said: "Dad, how soon will mother get a<br/>
prize?"<br/>
<br/>
We laughed. And yet it set me thinking,<br/>
how<br/>
I beat the air, because a neighbour's cow<br/>
Munched at our early cabbages, and ate<br/>
The lettuce up, and tramped my mignon-<br/>
ette!<br/>
And many a time I kicked against the<br/>
pricks<br/>
Because the little dog at number six<br/>
Disturbed my rest. And then, how cross<br/>
I got<br/>
When Jane seemed discontented with her<br/>
lot.<br/>
Until poor John in desperation said<br/>
He wearied of the theme—and went to<br/>
bed!<br/>
<br/>
And how I vexed myself that day, when he<br/>
Brought people unexpectedly for tea,<br/>
Because the table-cloth was old and<br/>
stained,<br/>
And not a single piece of cake remained.<br/>
And how my poor head ached! Because,<br/>
well there!<br/>
It uses lots of strength to beat the air!<br/>
<br/>
"I am a boxer!" Here and now I pray<br/>
For grace to hit the self-life every day.<br/>
And when the old annoyance comes once<br/>
more<br/>
And the old temper rises sharp and sore,<br/>
I shall hit hard and straight, O Tender-<br/>
Wise,<br/>
And read approval in Thy loving eyes.<br/></p>
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<h2> The Home Lights </h2>
<p>"In my father's house!" The words<br/>
Bring sweet cadence to my ears.<br/>
Wandering thoughts, like homing birds,<br/>
Fly all swiftly down the years,<br/>
To that wide casement, where I always see<br/>
Bright love-lamps leaning out to welcome<br/>
me.<br/>
<br/>
Sweet it was, how sweet to go<br/>
To the worn, familiar door.<br/>
No need to stand a while, and wait,<br/>
Outside the well-remembered gate;<br/>
No need to knock;<br/>
The easy lock<br/>
Turned almost of itself, and so<br/>
My spirit was "at home" once more.<br/>
And then, within, how good to find<br/>
The same cool atmosphere of peace,<br/>
Where I, a tired child, might cease<br/>
To grieve, or dread,<br/>
Or toil for bread.<br/>
I could forget<br/>
The dreary fret.<br/>
The strivings after hopes too high,<br/>
I let them every one go by.<br/>
The ills of life, the blows unkind,<br/>
These fearsome things were left behind.<br/>
<br/>
ENVOY.<br/>
<br/>
O trembling soul of mine,<br/>
See how God's mercies shine!<br/>
When thou shalt rise,<br/>
And, stripped of earth, shall stand<br/>
Within an Unknown Land;<br/>
Alone, where no familiar thing<br/>
May bring familiar comforting;<br/>
Look up! 'Tis but thy Father's<br/>
House! And, see<br/>
His love-lamps leaning out to welcome<br/>
thee!<br/></p>
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<h2> To an Old Teapot </h2>
<p>Now from the dust of half-forgotten<br/>
things,<br/>
You rise to haunt me at the year's Spring-<br/>
cleaning,<br/>
And bring to memory dim imaginings<br/>
Of mystic meaning.<br/>
<br/>
No old-time potter handled you, I ween,<br/>
Nor yet were you of gold or silver molten;<br/>
No Derby stamp, nor Worcester, can be<br/>
seen,<br/>
Nor Royal Doulton.<br/>
<br/>
You never stood to grace the princely<br/>
board<br/>
Of monarchs in some Oriental palace.<br/>
Your lid is chipped, your chubby side is<br/>
scored<br/>
As if in malice.<br/>
<br/>
I hesitate to say it, but your spout<br/>
Is with unhandsome rivets held together—<br/>
Mute witnesses of treatment meted out<br/>
In regions nether.<br/>
<br/>
O patient sufferer of many bumps!<br/>
I ask it gently—shall the dustbin hold<br/>
you?<br/>
And will the dust-heap, with its cabbage<br/>
stumps,<br/>
At last enfold you?<br/>
<br/>
It ought. And yet with gentle hands I<br/>
place<br/>
You with my priceless Delft and Dresden<br/>
china,<br/>
For sake of one who loved your homely<br/>
face<br/>
In days diviner.<br/></p>
<p>To a Rebellious<br/>
Daughter<br/>
<br/>
You call authority "a grievous thing."<br/>
With careless hands you snap the<br/>
leading string,<br/>
And, for a frolic (so it seems to you),<br/>
Put off the old love, and put on the new.<br/>
<br/>
For "What does Mother know of love?"<br/>
you say.<br/>
"Did her soul ever thrill?<br/>
Did little tendernesses ever creep<br/>
Into her dreams, and over-ride her will?<br/>
Did her eyes shine, or her heart ever leap<br/>
As my heart leaps to-day?<br/>
I, who am young; who long to try my<br/>
wings!<br/>
<br/>
How should she understand,<br/>
She, with her calm cool hand?<br/>
She never felt such yearnings? And,<br/>
beside,<br/>
It's clear I can't be tied<br/>
For ever to my mother's apron strings."<br/>
<br/>
There are Infinities of Knowledge, dear.<br/>
And there are mysteries, not yet made<br/>
clear<br/>
To you, the Uninitiate. . . . Life's book<br/>
Is open, yes; but you may only look<br/>
At its first section. Youth<br/>
Is part, not all, the truth.<br/>
It is impossible that you should see<br/>
The end from the beginning perfectly.<br/>
<br/>
You answer: "Even so.<br/>
But how can Mother know,<br/>
Who meditates upon the price of bacon?<br/>
On 'liberties' the charwoman has taken,<br/>
And on the laundry's last atrocities?<br/>
She knows her cookery book,<br/>
And how a joint of English meat should<br/>
look.<br/>
But all such things as these<br/>
Make up her life. She dwells in tents,<br/>
but I<br/>
In a vast temple open to the sky."<br/>
<br/>
Yet, time was, when that Mother stooped<br/>
to learn<br/>
The language written in your infant face.<br/>
For years she walked your pace,<br/>
And none but she interpreted your chatter.<br/>
Who else felt interest in such pitter-patter?<br/>
Or, weary, joined in all your games with<br/>
zest,<br/>
And managed with a minimum of rest?<br/>
Now, is it not your turn<br/>
To bridge the gulf, to span the gap be-<br/>
tween you?<br/>
To-day, before Death's angel over-lean<br/>
you,<br/>
Before your chance is gone?<br/>
This is worth thinking on.<br/>
<br/>
"Are mothers blameless, then?" Nay,<br/>
dearie, nay.<br/>
Nor even tactful, always. Yet there may<br/>
Come some grey dawning in the by<br/>
and by,<br/>
When, no more brave, nor sure, nor strong,<br/>
you'll cry<br/>
Aloud to God, for that despised thing,<br/>
The old dear comfort—Mother's apron<br/>
string.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"></SPAN></p>
<h2> For Mothering! </h2>
<p>Up to the Hall, my lady there'll wear<br/>
her satin gown,<br/>
For little Miss and Master'll be coming<br/>
down from town.<br/>
Oh ay, the childern's coming! The<br/>
CHILDERN did I say?<br/>
Of course, they're man and woman grown,<br/>
this many and many a day.<br/>
But still, my lady's mouth do smile, and<br/>
squire looks fit to sing,<br/>
As Master John and Miss Elaine is coming<br/>
Mothering.<br/>
<br/>
Then down to Farmer Westacott's, there's<br/>
doings fine and grand,<br/>
Because young Jake is coming home from<br/>
sea, you understand.<br/>
Put into port but yesternight, and when<br/>
he steps ashore,<br/>
'Tis coming home the laddie is, to Somer-<br/>
set once more.<br/>
And so her's baking spicy cakes, and stir-<br/>
ring raisins in,<br/>
To welcome of her only chick, who's<br/>
coming Mothering.<br/>
<br/>
And what of we? And ain't we got no<br/>
childern for to come?<br/>
Well, yes! There's Sam and Henery,<br/>
and they'll be coming home.<br/>
And Ned is very nigh six foot, and Joe is<br/>
six foot three!<br/>
But childern still to my good man, and<br/>
childern still to me!<br/>
And all the vi'lets seem to know, and all<br/>
the thrushes sing,<br/>
As how our Kate, and Bess and Flo is<br/>
coming Mothering.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Little Fan </h2>
<p>When little Fanny came to town, I<br/>
felt as I could sing!<br/>
She were the sprackest little maid, the<br/>
sharpest, pertest thing.<br/>
Her mother were as proud as punch, and<br/>
as for I—well, there!<br/>
I never see sich gert blue eyes, I never<br/>
see sich hair!<br/>
"If all the weans in Somerset," says I,<br/>
"was standin' here,<br/>
Not one could hold a candle light, 'long-<br/>
side our little dear."<br/>
<br/>
Now FANNY'S little Fan have come! She's<br/>
clingin' round my knees,<br/>
She's asking me for sups of tea, and bites<br/>
of bread and cheese.<br/>
She's climbing into grandma's bed, she's<br/>
stroking grandma's face.<br/>
She's tore my paper into bits and strawed<br/>
it round the place.<br/>
"If all the weans in all the world," says<br/>
I, "was standin' here,<br/>
Not one could hold a farthin' dip to<br/>
Fanny's little dear!"<br/>
For Fanny's little Fanny—oh, she's took<br/>
the heart of me!<br/>
'Tis childern's childern is the CROWN of<br/>
humble folk like we!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Naughty Day </h2>
<p>I've had a naughty day to-day.<br/>
I scrunched a biscuit in my hair,<br/>
And dipped my feeder in the milk,<br/>
And spread my rusk upon a chair.<br/>
<br/>
When mother put me in my bath,<br/>
I tossed the water all about,<br/>
And popped the soap upon my head,<br/>
And threw the sponge and flannel out.<br/>
<br/>
I wouldn't let her put my hand<br/>
Inside the arm-hole of my vest;<br/>
I held the sleeve until she said<br/>
I really never SHOULD be dressed.<br/>
<br/>
And while she made the beds, I found<br/>
Her tidy, and took out the hairs;<br/>
And then I got the water-can<br/>
And tipped it headlong down the stairs.<br/>
<br/>
I crawled along the kitchen floor,<br/>
And got some coal out of the box,<br/>
And drew black pictures on the walls,<br/>
And wiped my fingers on my socks.<br/>
<br/>
Oh, this HAS been a naughty day!<br/>
That's why they've put me off to bed.<br/>
"He CAN'T get into mischief there,<br/>
Perhaps we'll have some peace," they<br/>
said.<br/>
<br/>
They put the net across my cot,<br/>
Or else downstairs again I'd creep.<br/>
But, see, I'll suck the counterpane<br/>
To PULP before I go to sleep!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<h2> To a Little White Bird </h2>
<p>Into the world you came, and I was<br/>
dumb,<br/>
Because "God did it," so the wise ones<br/>
said;<br/>
I wonder sometimes "Did you really<br/>
come?"<br/>
And "Are you truly . . . DEAD?"<br/>
<br/>
Thus you went out—alone and uncaressed;<br/>
O sweet, soft thing, in all your infant<br/>
grace,<br/>
I never held you in my arms, nor pressed<br/>
Warm kisses on your face!<br/>
<br/>
But, in the Garden of the Undefiled,<br/>
My soul will claim you . . . you, and<br/>
not another;<br/>
I shall hold out my arms, and say "MY<br/>
CHILD!"<br/>
And you will call me "MOTHER!"<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Because </h2>
<p>(PSALM CXVI.)<br/>
<br/>
Because He heard my voice, and<br/>
answered me,<br/>
Because He listened, ah, so patiently,<br/>
In those dark days, when sorrowful, alone,<br/>
I knelt with tears, and prayed Him for a<br/>
stone;<br/>
Because He said me "Nay," and then in-<br/>
stead,<br/>
Oh, wonderful sweet truth! He gave me<br/>
bread,<br/>
Set my heart singing all in sweet accord;<br/>
Because of this, I love—I love the Lord!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"></SPAN></p>
<h2> When He Comes </h2>
<p>"When He comes!<br/>
My sweetest 'When'!"<br/>
C. ROSSETTI.<br/>
<br/>
Thus may it be (I thought) at some<br/>
day's close,<br/>
Some lilac-haunted eve, when every rose<br/>
Breathes forth its incense. May He find<br/>
me there,<br/>
In holy leisure, lifting hands of prayer,<br/>
In some sweet garden place,<br/>
To catch the first dear wonder of His Face!<br/>
<br/>
Or, in my room above,<br/>
In silent meditation of His love,<br/>
My soul illumined with a rapture rare.<br/>
It would be sweet, if even then, these eyes<br/>
Might glimpse Him coming in the East-<br/>
ern skies,<br/>
And be caught up to meet Him in the<br/>
air.<br/>
<br/>
But now! Ah, now, the days<br/>
Rush by their hurrying ways!<br/>
No longer know I vague imaginings,<br/>
For every hour has wings.<br/>
Yet my heart watches . . . as I work I<br/>
say,<br/>
All simply, to Him: "Come! And if to-day,<br/>
Then wilt Thou find me thus: just as I<br/>
am—<br/>
Tending my household; stirring goose-<br/>
berry jam;<br/>
Or swiftly rinsing tiny vests and hose,<br/>
With puzzled forehead patching some one's<br/>
clothes;<br/>
Guiding small footsteps, swift to hear, and<br/>
run,<br/>
From early dawn till setting of the sun."<br/>
<br/>
And whensoe'er He comes, I'll rise and go,<br/>
Yes, all the gladlier that He found me so.<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART2" id="link2H_PART2"></SPAN></p>
<h2> PART II. OUT OF DOORS </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Early Spring </h2>
<p>Quick through the gates of Fairyland<br/>
The South Wind forced his way.<br/>
'Twas his to make the Earth forget<br/>
Her grief of yesterday.<br/>
"'Tis mine," cried he, "to bring her joy!"<br/>
And on his lightsome feet<br/>
In haste he slung the snowdrop bells,<br/>
Pushed past the Fairy sentinels,<br/>
And out with laughter sweet.<br/>
<br/>
Clear flames of Crocus glimmered on<br/>
The shining way he went.<br/>
He whispered to the trees strange tales<br/>
Of wondrous sweet intent,<br/>
When, suddenly, his witching voice<br/>
With timbre rich and rare,<br/>
Rang through the woodlands till it cleft<br/>
Earth's silent solitudes, and left<br/>
A Dream of Roses there!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Witness </h2>
<p>The Master of the Garden said;<br/>
"Who, now the Earth seems cold<br/>
and dead,<br/>
Will by his fearless witnessing<br/>
Hold men's hearts for the tardy spring?"<br/>
<br/>
"Not yet. I am but half awake,"<br/>
All drowsily the Primrose spake.<br/>
And fast the sleeping Daffodils<br/>
Had folded up their golden frills.<br/>
<br/>
"Indeed," the frail Anemone<br/>
Said softly, "'tis too cold for me."<br/>
Wood Hyacinths, all deeply set,<br/>
Replied: "No ice has melted yet."<br/>
<br/>
When suddenly, with smile so bright,<br/>
Up sprang a Winter Aconite,<br/>
And to the Master joyfully<br/>
She cried: "I will the witness be."<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"></SPAN></p>
<h2> In Somerset </h2>
<p>In Somerset they guide the plough<br/>
From early dawn till twilight now.<br/>
The good red earth smells sweeter yet,<br/>
Behind the plough, in Somerset.<br/>
The celandines round last year's mow<br/>
Blaze out . . . and with his old-time vow<br/>
The South Wind woos the Violet,<br/>
In Somerset.<br/>
<br/>
Then, every brimming dyke and trough<br/>
Is laughing wide with ripples now,<br/>
And oh, 'tis easy to forget<br/>
That wintry winds can sigh and sough,<br/>
When thrushes chant on every bough<br/>
In Somerset!<br/></p>
<p>Song of a Woodland<br/>
Stream<br/>
<br/>
Silent was I, and so still,<br/>
As day followed day.<br/>
Imprisoned until<br/>
King Frost worked his will.<br/>
Held fast like a vice,<br/>
In his cold hand of ice,<br/>
For fear kept me silent, and lo<br/>
He had wrapped me around and about<br/>
with a mantle of snow.<br/>
<br/>
But sudden there spake<br/>
One greater than he.<br/>
Then my heart was awake,<br/>
And my spirit ran free.<br/>
<br/>
At His bidding my bands fell apart, He<br/>
had burst them asunder.<br/>
I can feel the swift wind rushing by me,<br/>
once more the old wonder<br/>
Of quickening sap stirs my pulses—I<br/>
shout in my gladness,<br/>
Forgetting the sadness,<br/>
For the Voice of the Lord fills the air!<br/>
<br/>
And forth through the hollow I go, where<br/>
in glad April weather,<br/>
The trees of the forest break out into<br/>
singing together.<br/>
And here the frail windflowers will cluster,<br/>
with young ferns uncurling,<br/>
Where broader and deeper my waters go<br/>
eddying, whirling,<br/>
To meet the sweet Spring on her journey<br/>
—His servant to be,<br/>
Whose word set me free!<br/></p>
<p>Luggage in Advance<br/>
<br/>
"The Fairies must have come," I<br/>
said,<br/>
"For through the moist leaves, brown and<br/>
dead,<br/>
The Primroses are pushing up,<br/>
And here's a scarlet Fairy-cup.<br/>
They must have come, because I see<br/>
A single Wood Anemone,<br/>
The flower that everybody knows<br/>
The Fairies use to scent their clothes.<br/>
And hark! The South Wind blowing, fills<br/>
The trumpets of the Daffodils.<br/>
They MUST have come!"<br/>
<br/>
Then loud to me<br/>
Sang from a budding cherry tree,<br/>
A cheerful Thrush . . . "I say! I say!<br/>
The Fairy Folk are on their way.<br/>
Look out! Look out! Beneath your feet,<br/>
Are all their treasures: Sweet! Sweet!<br/>
Sweet!<br/>
They could not carry them, you see,<br/>
Those caskets crammed with witchery,<br/>
So ready for the first Spring dance,<br/>
They sent their Luggage in Advance!"<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"></SPAN></p>
<h2> At the Cross Roads </h2>
<p>There I halted. Further down the<br/>
hollow<br/>
Stood the township, where my errand lay.<br/>
Firm my purpose, till a voice cried<br/>
(Follow!<br/>
Come this way—I tell you—come this<br/>
way!)<br/>
<br/>
Silence, Thrush! You know I think of<br/>
buying<br/>
A Spring-tide hat; my frock is worn and<br/>
old.<br/>
So to the shops I go. What's that you're<br/>
crying?<br/>
(Here! Come here! And gather primrose<br/>
gold.)<br/>
Well, yes. Some day I will; but time is<br/>
going.<br/>
I haste to purchase silks and satins fair.<br/>
I'm all in rags. (The Lady's Smock is<br/>
showing<br/>
Up yonder, in the little coppice there.)<br/>
<br/>
And wood anemones spread out their<br/>
laces;<br/>
Each celandine has donned a silken gown;<br/>
The violets are lifting shy sweet faces.<br/>
(And there's a chiff-chaff, soft, and slim, and<br/>
brown.)<br/>
<br/>
But what about my hat? (The bees are<br/>
humming.)<br/>
And my new frock? (The hawthorn's<br/>
budding free!<br/>
Sweet! Oh, so sweet!) Well, have your<br/>
way. I'm coming!<br/>
And who's to blame for that? (Why, me!<br/>
Me! Me!)<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Summer met Me </h2>
<p>Summer met me in the glade,<br/>
With a host of fair princesses,<br/>
Golden iris, foxgloves staid,<br/>
Sunbeams flecked their gorgeous dresses.<br/>
Roses followed in her train,<br/>
Creamy elder-flowers beset me,<br/>
Singing, down the scented lane,<br/>
Summer met me!<br/>
<br/>
Summer met me! Harebells rang,<br/>
Honeysuckle clustered near,<br/>
As the royal pageant sang<br/>
Songs enchanting to the ear.<br/>
Rainy days may come apace,<br/>
Nevermore to grieve or fret me,<br/>
Since, in all her radiant grace,<br/>
Summer met me!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Carrier </h2>
<p>"Owd John's got past his work," said<br/>
they,<br/>
Last week as ever was—"don't pay<br/>
To send by him. He's stoopid, too,<br/>
And brings things what won't never do.<br/>
We'll send by post, he is that slow.<br/>
And that owd hoss of his can't go."<br/>
<br/>
But 'smornin', well, 'twas fun to see<br/>
The gentlefolks run after we.<br/>
Squire's lady stopped I in the lane,<br/>
"Oh," says she, "goin' to town again?<br/>
You'll not mind calling into Bings<br/>
To fetch my cakes and buns and things?<br/>
I've got a party comin' on,<br/>
And nought to eat . . . so, DO 'ee, John."<br/>
<br/>
Then, up the street, who should I see,<br/>
But old Mam Bessant hail'n' me.<br/>
And Doctor's wife, and Mrs. Higgs<br/>
Was wantin' vittles for their pigs,<br/>
And would I bring some? (Well, what<br/>
nex'?)<br/>
And Granny Dunn has broke her specs,<br/>
And wants 'em mended up in town,<br/>
So would John call and bring 'em down<br/>
To-night . . . ? and so the tale goes on,<br/>
'Tis, "Sure you will, now DO 'ee, John."<br/>
<br/>
Well, 'tis a hevil wind that blows<br/>
Nobody any good; it shows<br/>
As owd John haves his uses yet,<br/>
Though now and then he do forget.<br/>
Gee up, owd gal. When strikes is on,<br/>
They're glad of pore owd stoopid John.<br/></p>
<p>The Lad's Love by the<br/>
Gate<br/>
<br/>
Down in the dear West Country,<br/>
there's a garden where I know<br/>
The Spring is rioting this hour, though<br/>
I am far away—<br/>
Where all the glad flower-faces are old<br/>
loves of long ago,<br/>
And each in its accustomed place is<br/>
blossoming to-day.<br/>
<br/>
The lilac drops her amethysts upon the<br/>
mossy wall,<br/>
While in her boughs a cheerful thrush<br/>
is calling to his mate.<br/>
Dear breath of mignonette and stocks!<br/>
I love you, know you all.<br/>
And, oh, the fragrant spices from the<br/>
lad's love by the gate!<br/>
<br/>
Kind wind from the West Country, wet<br/>
wind, but scented so,<br/>
That straight from my dear garden<br/>
you seem but lately come,<br/>
Just tell me of the yellow broom, the<br/>
guelder rose's snow,<br/>
And of the tangled clematis where<br/>
myriad insects hum.<br/>
<br/>
Oh, is there any heartsease left, or any<br/>
rosemary?<br/>
And in their own green solitudes, say,<br/>
do the lilies wait?<br/>
I knew it! Gentle wind, but once—<br/>
speak low and tenderly—<br/>
How fares it—tell me truly—with the<br/>
lad's love by the gate?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Thrush </h2>
<p>Across the land came a magic word<br/>
When the earth was bare and<br/>
lonely,<br/>
And I sit and sing of the joyous spring,<br/>
For 'twas I who heard, I only!<br/>
Then dreams came by, of the gladsome<br/>
days,<br/>
Of many a wayside posy;<br/>
For a crocus peeps where the wild rose<br/>
sleeps,<br/>
And the willow wands are rosy!<br/>
<br/>
Oh! the time to be! When the paths<br/>
are green,<br/>
When the primrose-gold is lying<br/>
'Neath the hazel spray, where the catkins<br/>
sway,<br/>
And the dear south wind comes sigh-<br/>
ing.<br/>
<br/>
My mate and I, we shall build a nest,<br/>
So snug and warm and cosy,<br/>
When the kingcups gleam on the meadow<br/>
stream,<br/>
Where the willow wands are rosy!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"></SPAN></p>
<h2> In Dorset Dear </h2>
<p>In Dorset Dear they're making hay<br/>
In just the old West Country way.<br/>
With fork and rake and old-time gear<br/>
They make the hay in Dorset Dear.<br/>
From early morn till twilight grey<br/>
They toss and turn and shake the hay.<br/>
And all the countryside is gay<br/>
With roses on the fallen may,<br/>
For 'tis the hay-time of the year<br/>
In Dorset Dear.<br/>
<br/>
The loaded waggons wend their way<br/>
Across the pasture-lands, and stay<br/>
Beside the hedge where foxgloves peer;<br/>
And ricks that shall be fashioned here<br/>
Will be the sweetest stuff, they say,<br/>
In Dorset Dear!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Flight of the Fairies </h2>
<p>There's a rustle in the woodlands,<br/>
and a sighing in the breeze,<br/>
For the Little Folk are busy in the bushes<br/>
and the trees;<br/>
They are packing up their treasures, every<br/>
one with nimble hand,<br/>
Ready for the coming journey back to<br/>
sunny Fairyland.<br/>
<br/>
They have gathered up the jewels from<br/>
their beds of mossy green,<br/>
With all the dewy diamonds that summer<br/>
morns have seen;<br/>
The silver from the lichen and the<br/>
powdered gold dust, too,<br/>
Where the buttercups have flourished and<br/>
the dandelions grew.<br/>
<br/>
They packed away the birdies' songs,<br/>
then, lest we should be sad,<br/>
They left the Robin's carol out, to make<br/>
the winter glad;<br/>
They packed the fragrance of the flowers,<br/>
then, lest we should forget,<br/>
Out of the pearly scented box they<br/>
dropped a Violet.<br/>
<br/>
Then o'er a leafy carpet, by the silent<br/>
woods they came,<br/>
Where the golden bracken lingered and<br/>
the maples were aflame.<br/>
On the stream the starlight shimmered, o'er<br/>
their wings the moonbeams shone,<br/>
Music filtered through the forest—and the<br/>
Little Folk were gone!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Street Player </h2>
<p>The shopping had been tedious, and<br/>
the rain<br/>
Came pelting down as she turned home<br/>
again.<br/>
<br/>
The motor-bus swirled past with rush and<br/>
whirr,<br/>
Nought but its fumes of petrol left for<br/>
her.<br/>
<br/>
The bloaters in her basket, and the cheese<br/>
Malodorously mixed themselves with<br/>
these.<br/>
<br/>
And all seemed wrong. The world was<br/>
drab and grey<br/>
As the slow minutes wept themselves<br/>
away.<br/>
<br/>
And then, athwart the noises of the street,<br/>
A violin flung out an Irish air.<br/>
<br/>
"I'll take you home again, Kathleen."<br/>
Ah, sweet,<br/>
How tender-sweet those lilting phrases<br/>
were!<br/>
<br/>
They soothed away the weariness, and<br/>
brought<br/>
Such peace to one worn woman, over-<br/>
wrought,<br/>
<br/>
That she forgot the things which vexed<br/>
her so:<br/>
The too outrageous price of calico,<br/>
<br/>
The shop-girl's look of pitying insolence<br/>
Because she paused to count the dwindling<br/>
pence.<br/>
<br/>
The player stopped. But the rapt vision<br/>
stayed.<br/>
That woman faced life's worries unafraid.<br/>
<br/>
The sugar shortage now had ceased to be<br/>
An insurmountable calamity.<br/>
<br/>
Her kingdom was not bacon, no, nor<br/>
butter,<br/>
But things more costly still, too rare to<br/>
utter.<br/>
<br/>
And, over chimney-pots, so bare and tall,<br/>
The sun set gloriously, after all.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"></SPAN></p>
<h2> On All Souls' Eve </h2>
<p>Oh, the garden ways are lonely!<br/>
Winds that bluster, winds that<br/>
shout,<br/>
Battle with the strong laburnum,<br/>
Toss the sad brown leaves about.<br/>
In the gay herbaceous border,<br/>
Now a scene of wild disorder,<br/>
The last dear hollyhock has flamed his<br/>
crimson glory out.<br/>
<br/>
Yet, upon this night of longing,<br/>
Souls are all abroad, they say.<br/>
Will they come, the dazzling blossoms,<br/>
That were here but yesterday?<br/>
Will the ghosts of radiant roses<br/>
And my sheltered lily-closes<br/>
Hold once more their shattered fragrance<br/>
now November's on her way?<br/>
<br/>
Wallflowers, surely you'll remember,<br/>
Pinks, recall it, will you not?<br/>
How I loved and watched and tended,<br/>
Made this ground a hallowed spot:<br/>
Pansies, with the soft meek faces,<br/>
Harebells, with a thousand graces:<br/>
Dear dead loves, I wait and listen. Tell<br/>
me, have you quite forgot?<br/>
<br/>
HUSH! THEY COME! For down the path-<br/>
way<br/>
Steals a fragrance honey-sweet.<br/>
Larkspurs, lilies, stocks, and roses,<br/>
Hasten now my heart to greet.<br/>
Stay, oh, stay! My hands would hold<br/>
you . . .<br/>
But the arms that would enfold you<br/>
Crush the bush of lad's love growing in<br/>
the dusk beside my feet.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Log Fire </h2>
<p>In her last hour of life the tree<br/>
Gave up her glorious memories,<br/>
Wild scent of wood anemone,<br/>
The sapphire blue of April skies.<br/>
<br/>
With faint but ever-strength'ning flame,<br/>
The dew-drenched hyacinthine spires<br/>
Were lost, as red-gold bracken came,<br/>
With maple bathed in living fires.<br/>
<br/>
Grey smoke of ancient clematis<br/>
Towards the silver birch inclined,<br/>
And deep in thorny fastnesses<br/>
The coral bryony entwined.<br/>
<br/>
Then softly through the dusky room<br/>
They strayed, fair ghosts of other days,<br/>
With breath like early cherry bloom,<br/>
With tender eyes and gentle ways.<br/>
<br/>
They glimmered on the sombre walls,<br/>
They danced upon the oaken floor,<br/>
Till through the loudly silent halls<br/>
Joy reigned majestical once more.<br/>
<br/>
Up blazed the fire, and, dazzling clear,<br/>
One rapturous Spirit radiant stood.<br/>
'Twas you at last! Yes, YOU, my dear.<br/>
We two were back in Gatcombe Wood!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"></SPAN></p>
<h2> God save the King </h2>
<p>GOD SAVE OUR GRACIOUS KING. (It<br/>
seems<br/>
The Church is full of bygone dreams.)<br/>
<br/>
LONG LIVE OUR NOBLE KING. (My own,<br/>
'Tis hard to stand here all alone.)<br/>
<br/>
GOD SAVE THE KING. (But, sweetheart, you<br/>
Were always brave to dare and do.)<br/>
<br/>
SEND HIM VICTORIOUS. (For then,<br/>
My darling will come home again!)<br/>
<br/>
HAPPY AND GLORIOUS ('Twill be<br/>
Like Heaven to him—and what to me?)<br/>
<br/>
LONG TO REIGN OVER US. (My dear!<br/>
And we'd been wedded one short year!)<br/>
<br/>
GOD SAVE OUR KING. (And Lord, I pray<br/>
Keep MY King safe this very day.)<br/>
<br/>
Forgive us, thou—great England's kingly<br/>
King<br/>
That thus do women National Anthems<br/>
sing.<br/></p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
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