ACROSS in my neighbor's window, With its drapings of satin and lace, I see, 'neath a crown of ringlets, A baby's innocent face. His feet in their wee red slippers Are tapping the polished glass, And the crowd in the street look upward, And nod and smile as they pass. Just here in @3my@1 cottage window, In the rays of the noonday sun, With a patch on his faded apron, Stands my own little one. His face is as pure and handsome As the baby's over the way, And he keeps my heart from breaking At my toiling every day. Sometimes when the day is ended, And I sit in the dusk to rest, With the face of my sleepy darling Hugged close to my lonely breast, I pray that my neighbor's baby May not catch heaven's roses, all; But that some may crown the forehead Of my loved one as they fall. And when I draw the stockings From his little tired feet, And kiss the rosy dimples In his limbs so round and sweet, I think of the dainty garments Some little children wear, And frown that my God withholds them From @3mine@1, so pure and fair. May God forgive my envy, I knew not what I said; My heart is crushed and humbled: My neighbor's boy is dead. I saw the little coffin As they carried it out to-day; A mother's heart is breaking In the mansion over the way. The light is fair in my window, The blossoms bloom at my door; My boy is chasing the sunbeams That dance on the cottage floor; The roses of health are blushing On my darling's cheek to-day; But baby is @3gone@1 from the window Of the house that's over the way. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...RESERVE by LIZETTE WOODWORTH REESE STELLA'S BIRTHDAY, 1718 by JONATHAN SWIFT THE MAGPIES IN PICARDY by T. P. CAMERON WILSON EPIGRAM: 18. THE ENEMY OF LIFE by THOMAS WYATT |