Page:Fugitive Poetry 1600-1878.djvu/305

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Little Minnie.
Art thou weary, little Minnie?Lay thy head upon my knee:It makes the old man's heart rejoiceThy sunny face to see.Well may the aged falter,Who tread life's rugged way,When even little MinnieGrows weary of her play.
Tell thee a story, Minnie?Nay, I am growing old,And all the stories of my youthLong since to thee were told.But if thou'lt listen, darling,There is something I would say,That you may oft rememberWhen I have passed away.
Minnie! my sweetest thought for years,That's cheered me many a day,Is the memory of the motherWho taught me first to pray.Minnie! do you rememberYour gentle mother too,Whose only grief in dyingWas the thought of leaving you?
Ah, child! I mind me of the time—A tiny babe wert thou—When the pure baptismal waterWas sprinkled on thy brow.Thy mother gave me one pet lambOne of Christ's flock to be:Now in the fields of Paradise,She waiteth there for thee.
Ah, Minnie! little Minnie!When at the close of dayYou kneel beside your little bedYour evening prayer to say;Then pray to God to aid theeTo keep thy mother's vow,That sin's dark shadow may not restUpon thy fair young brow.