Page:Poems Blake.djvu/137

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THE PICKET.
129
On the morrow comes Thanksgiving, when from households far and wide
Round the hearths the children gather,—seek once more the old fireside;
Fill once more the vacant places that they left so long ago,
      Self-relying,
      Proudly trying
    All life's unknown joy and woe.

On the morrow comes Thanksgiving! Not as long ago it came,
Bright, without a shade of sorrow lingering round its good old name;
War has waved his crimson banner, and beneath its blood stains rest
      All his glory,
      Dim and gory,
    Laid on many a lifeless breast.

Wife and child and aged mother wake at morn to bend the knee,
And, around the hearthstone glowing, supplicate their God for me;
Near my vacant chair they gather, blending tears amid their prayers,—