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GRANDMOTHER'S VALENTINE, by                     Poet's Biography
First Line: The branches creaked on the garret roof
Last Line: Grandmother's valentine told me so.
Alternate Author Name(s): Michener, Harry, Mrs.
Subject(s): Cupid; Grandparents; Holidays; Love; Valentine's Day; Eros; Grandmothers; Grandfathers; Great Grandfathers; Great Grandmothers


THE branches creaked on the garret roof,
And the snow blew in at the eaves,
When I found a hymn-book, tattered and torn,
And turned its mouldering leaves.
And lo! in its yellow pages lay
Grandmother's valentine tucked away.

Hearts and roses together twined,
And sweet little Cupids quaint,
The gilt from the hearts was worn away,
And the pink of the roses faint,
And the Cupids' faces were blurred and dim,
But it marked the place of her favorite hymn.

Before me rose on the dusty floor
The ghost of a slender maid,
Like the portrait hung on the parlor wall,
In a gown of flowered brocade,
And ivory laces, as fine as air,
And a diamond star in her powdered hair.

A handsome gallant beside her bent
In the country dress of old,
He wore a ring with a ruby set
And a waistcoat flowered with gold,
Ruffled wrists and a ribboned cue,
Silver buckles and coat of blue.

"What hast thou shut in thy lily hand
With a tassel of azure tied?"
"A valentine left on my window sill
In the gray of the dawn," she cried,
"And I love the lover who rode so far
In the deep snows, under the morning star."

Then he pressed his arm to her rounded waist
And his lips to her rosy ear:
"Oh, lean thy head to my breast, I pray,
And I'll tell thee a secret, dear!
It was I who rode with the valentine
So fast and so far — and thou art mine!"

A mouse ran over the broken boards,
Behold! when I looked again
For the squire in the gay blue coat
And the maid with the silken train,
There was nothing there but the shadows tall
And the cobwebs long on the windy wall.

But I dropped a tear on the musty book
And I tenderly laid it down
With the treasure, deep in the cedar chest,
In the folds of a faded gown,
And left it there on the lavender leaves
And ashes of roses, under the eaves.

For I thought of a youth with soft brown eyes
And how I had vexed him sore.
The dim, dead lovers — they touched my heart,
And so I was cold no more;
For love is the same as long ago,
Grandmother's valentine told me so.





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