BESIDE her ashen hearth she sate her down, Whence he she loved had fled, -- His children plucking at her sombre gown And calling for the dead. One came to her clad in the robes of May, And said sweet words of cheer, Bidding her bear the burden in God's way, And feel her loved ones near. And she who spake thus would have given, thrice blest, Long lives of happy years, To clasp his children to a mother's breast, And weep his widow's tears. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EARTH'S IMMORTALITIES: LOVE by ROBERT BROWNING TO A WATERFOWL by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT THE OTHER SIDE OF A MIRROR by MARY ELIZABETH COLERIDGE THE YANKEE PRIVATEER by ARTHUR HALE SONNET PREFIXED TO 'THE COMMONWEALTH & GOVERNMENT OF VENICE' by EDMUND SPENSER MY PRAYER by HENRY DAVID THOREAU ON CYNTHIA, SINGING A RECITATIVE PIECE OF MUSIC by PHILIP AYRES |