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Poems Sigourney 1834/The Mother

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For works with similar titles, see The Mother.
4019925Poems Sigourney 1834The Mother1834Lydia Sigourney



THE MOTHER.


"It may be Autumn, yea Winter, with the woman,—but with the mother, as a mother, it is always Spring."
Sermon of the Rev. Thomas Cobbet, at Lynn, 1665.


I saw an aged woman bow
    To weariness and care,
Time wrote his sorrows on her brow
    And 'mid her frosted hair.

Hope, from her breast had torn away
    Its rooting scathed and dry,
And on the pleasures of the gay
    She turned a joyless eye.

What was it that like sunbeam clear
    O'er her wan features run,
As pressing toward her deafened ear
    I named her absent son?

What was it? Ask a mother's breast
    Through which a fountain flows
Perennial, fathomless and blest,
    By winter never froze.

What was it? Ask the King of kings,
    Who hath decreed above
That change should mark all earthly things,
    Except a mother's love.