<h2><SPAN name="page5"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A SON SPEAKS</h2>
<p class="poetry"><span class="smcap">Mother</span>, sit down,
for I have much to say<br/>
Anent this widespread ever-growing theme<br/>
Of woman and her virtues and her rights.</p>
<p class="poetry">I left you for the large, loud world of men,<br/>
When I had lived one little score of years.<br/>
I judged all women by you, and my heart<br/>
Was filled with high esteem and reverence<br/>
For your angelic sex; and for the wives,<br/>
The sisters, daughters, mothers of my friends<br/>
I held but holy thoughts. To fallen stars<br/>
(Of whom you told me in our last sweet talk,<br/>
Warning me of the dangers in my path)<br/>
I gave wide pity as you bade me to,<br/>
Saying their sins harked back to my base sex.</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page6"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
6</span>Now listen, mother mine: Ten years have passed<br/>
Since that clean-minded and pure-bodied youth,<br/>
Thinking to write his name upon the stars,<br/>
Went from your presence. He returns to you<br/>
Fallen from his altitude of thought,<br/>
Hiding deep scars of sins upon his soul,<br/>
His fair illusions shattered and destroyed.<br/>
And would you know the story of his fall?</p>
<p class="poetry">He sat beside a good man’s honoured
wife<br/>
At her own table. She was beautiful<br/>
As woods in early autumn. Full of soft<br/>
And subtle witcheries of voice and look—<br/>
His senior, both in knowledge and in years.</p>
<p class="poetry">The boyish admiration of his glance<br/>
Was white as April sunlight when it falls<br/>
Upon a blooming tree, until she leaned<br/>
So close her rounded body sent quick thrills<br/>
Along his nerves. He thought it accident,<br/>
And moved a little; soon she leaned again.<br/>
The half-hid beauties of her heaving breast<br/>
Rising and falling under scented lace,<br/>
The teasing tendrils of her fragrant hair,<br/>
With intermittent touches on his cheek,<br/>
<SPAN name="page7"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Changed the
boy’s interest to a man’s desire.<br/>
She saw that first young madness in his eyes<br/>
And smiled and fanned the flame. That was his fall;<br/>
And as some mangled fly may crawl away<br/>
And leave his wings behind him in the web,<br/>
So were his wings of faith in womanhood<br/>
Left in the meshes of her sensuous net.</p>
<p class="poetry">The youth, forced into sudden manhood, went<br/>
Seeking the lost ideal of his dreams.<br/>
He met, in churches and in drawing-rooms,<br/>
Women who wore the mask of innocence<br/>
And basked in public favour, yet who seemed<br/>
To find their pleasure playing with men’s hearts,<br/>
As children play with loaded guns. He heard<br/>
(Until the tale fell dull upon his ears)<br/>
The unsolicited complaints of wives<br/>
And mothers all unsatisfied with life,<br/>
While crowned with every blessing earth can give<br/>
Longing for God knows what to bring content,<br/>
And openly or with appealing look<br/>
Asking for sympathy. (The first blind step<br/>
That leads from wifely honour down to shame,<br/>
Is ofttimes hid with flowers of sympathy.)</p>
<p class="poetry"><SPAN name="page8"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
8</span>He saw proud women who would flush and pale<br/>
With sense of outraged modesty if one<br/>
Spoke of the ancient sin before them, bare<br/>
To all men’s sight, or flimsily conceal<br/>
By veils that bid adventurous eyes proceed,<br/>
Charms meant alone for lover and for child.<br/>
He saw chaste virgins tempt and tantalise,<br/>
Lure and deny, invite—and then refuse,<br/>
And drive men forth half crazed to wantons’ arms.</p>
<p class="poetry">Mother, you taught me there were but two
kinds<br/>
Of women in the world—the good and bad.<br/>
But you have been too sheltered in the safe,<br/>
Old-fashioned sweetness of your quiet life,<br/>
To know how women of these modern days<br/>
Make licence of their new-found liberty.<br/>
Why, I have been more tempted and more shocked<br/>
By belles and beauties in the social whirl,<br/>
By trusted wives and mothers in their homes,<br/>
Than by the women of the underworld<br/>
Who sell their favours. Do you think me mad?<br/>
No, mother; I am sane, but very sad.</p>
<p class="poetry">I miss my boyhood’s faith in
woman’s worth—<br/>
Torn from my heart, by ‘good folks’ of the earth.</p>
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