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Poems (Odom)/In Memory

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4713360Poems — In MemoryMary Hunt McCaleb Odom
IN MEMORY Of my Husband, David M'Caleb, who died Sept. 29, 1882.
My trembling fingers nerveless fall,My broken harp in silence lies;In vain I sweep its severed strings,No thrilling notes of music rise.A chill has fallen on my soulThat freezes all my heart and brain;My inspiration all has flown,I can not wake to song again.
Yet I would send my spirit forthIn wailing music as I write,To tremble on the grave that holdsMy bleeding, broken heart to-night.But I, to sing his praise, must liftMy music to higher, purer spheres;The voiceless sorrow in my breastIs crushed and crystallized in tears.
My boyish sweetheart, brave and true;The hero of my earliest song,The idol of my maiden dreams,My soldier-lover, grand and strong;The keeper of my woman's heart,Holding it dearer than his life;The one who crowned me with his love,And blessed me with the name of wife.
From childhood to his manhood's primeMy image in his bosom slept;The strings of his impassioned soulNo hand but mine has ever swept.No other woman from his eyesThe tender glance of love has known;The close heart-pressure of his handWas mine, and always mine alone.
The love of all the world beside,Scarce missing it, I could have spared,But from my childhood to this hourHis heart I never could have shared—Not even with our little ones,Who climbed and clung upon his breast; He loved them fondly, but I knewHe alway loved their mother best.
And all my being sprang to meetThe warmth his spirit gave to mine,My soul in gladness pouring outFor him its richest, rarest wine.And now I sit alone, and weepIn silence; bitter, blinding tearsAre falling, as I gaze uponThe weary waste of coming years,—
The days when I shall never hearHis step upon my chamber floor;The twilights when my listening heartShall wait his coming never more.I stretch my arms in vain, and knowHis vanished form I can not reach;And feel the silence, cold and dark,Unbroken by his loving speech.
I look upon our oldest son,Striving to take his father's place;And trace that father's image onOur baby's fair, unconscious face. Dear little boy! he can not knowThe tender care his life has lost;The portal of a father's heartHis tiny feet had scarcely crossed.
Sometimes when tears are dropping fastUpon my folded, listless hands,And bitter anguish rends my heart,A childish form beside me stands.My little De, with trembling lips,And curling lashes wet with tears,Speaks words of comfort to my soul,In wisdom far beyond his years.
Of all the three, I think for himMy heart sends up its brightest flame;Perhaps it is because he wearsHis dear, dead father's honored name.I give my boy a love so deepIt trembles down almost to pain;In him I fancy I can seeMy own lost childhood rise again.
And though beneath the cruel crossMy heart in anguish seems to break, I know I must take up my lifeAnd live it for his children's sake.If I should faint and falter whenMy burden heavy on me lies,I feel his soul will stoop to mineAnd bring me courage from the skies.
God blessed and God bereft my life,He gave, and then He took away;But I will trust Him with a trustThat knows no falter nor decay.The love that blossomed sweetly hereHas burst into immortal bloom,And I shall find it once againBeyond the darkness of the tomb.