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Fugitive Poetry. 1600–1878/Little Minnie

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Little Minnie.
Art thou weary, little Minnie?Lay thy head upon my knee:It makes the old man's heart rejoiceThy sunny face to see.Well may the aged falter,Who tread life's rugged way,When even little MinnieGrows weary of her play.
Tell thee a story, Minnie?Nay, I am growing old,And all the stories of my youthLong since to thee were told.But if thou'lt listen, darling,There is something I would say,That you may oft rememberWhen I have passed away.
Minnie! my sweetest thought for years,That's cheered me many a day,Is the memory of the motherWho taught me first to pray.Minnie! do you rememberYour gentle mother too,Whose only grief in dyingWas the thought of leaving you?
Ah, child! I mind me of the time—A tiny babe wert thou—When the pure baptismal waterWas sprinkled on thy brow.Thy mother gave me one pet lambOne of Christ's flock to be:Now in the fields of Paradise,She waiteth there for thee.
Ah, Minnie! little Minnie!When at the close of dayYou kneel beside your little bedYour evening prayer to say;Then pray to God to aid theeTo keep thy mother's vow,That sin's dark shadow may not restUpon thy fair young brow.
"Remember thy Creator!"These words were kindly given,Even as a Father's hand, that leadsHis little ones to heaven.Ah, Minnie! closely hold His handAs through life's path you roam:Though rough and stormy be the way,'Twill safely lead you home.
And when they lay me by her side,In the peaceful churchyard there,And you sometimes gaze with tearful eyesUpon this vacant chair,These words, perchance, your lonely heartWill soothe 'mid grief and pain;Think darling we who loved you hereWill meet with you again.
Good-night, my little Minnie!You're weary now, I know;—Yes, twine your arms around me,And kiss me ere you go;Then hie thee to thy chamber—-Another day is gone;Good-night, my precious Minnie!God bless thee, little one!