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Poems (Chilton, 1885)/The Little Peasant

From Wikisource

The inspiration is Erastus Dow Palmer's 1861 sculpture First Disappointment, also known as The Little Peasant.
An earlier version of this poem was published in The Knickerbocker, vol. 57, no. 1 (January 1861), p. 56.

4671553PoemsPoems1885Robert S. Chilton

THE LITTLE PEASANT.[*]

Unstrung by her heart's first sorrow
In the dawn of her life she stands,
With listless fingers holding
A vacant nest in her hands.

The grass at her feet no longer
Is bright with the light of the skies,
As downward she looks through the tear-drops
That stand in her heaven-blue eyes.

For the nest, so cold and forsaken,
Has taught her the lesson to-day,
That the dearest of earthly treasures
Have wings and can fly away.

Yet she clings to the empty casket.
And sighs that no more is left,
As a mother clings to the cradle
Of its dimpled treasure bereft.

Alas! for the early sorrows
That gather about our way,
When the beautiful light has vanished,
And the hill-tops are cold and gray

 * A statue by E. D. Palmer.