Poems (Chilton, 1885)/The Little Peasant
Appearance
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
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.