Poems (Crandall)/The Child

The Child
A gracious child whose lovely face  Still beamed with the night of Heaven,Whose lips still wore the happy smile  An angel's kiss had given.
And the parents hearts by the dimpled hands  Were pressed so close together,They called them one, nor ever dreamed  That aught their heart could sever.
She twined bright flowers in the mothers hair,  But the mother could not keep her;With a laugh she sprang to her father's arms,  And the light in his eye grew deeper.
A few bright years, and the happy face  Had lost its innocent gladness;And in the depths of those wonderful eyes  Lay a look of reproachful sadness.
And stiller and weaker day by day  She clung to her mother sighing,And the mother wept through the long dark nights  For her beautiful child that was dying.
At last with bruised and bleeding heart  She lay with pain all ashiver;The mother clasped her in her arms  Each sensitive nerve aquiver.
She pressed her lips to the sunny curls,  Till ceased the pitiful moaning;And then that she with her child might die  She prayed with sobs and groaning.
And when the father sought his child;  The mother sad and tearful,Said, "Oh, my husband, our child is dead,"  His face grew pale and fearful.
She beckoned him into the shaded room  And stood by, silently weeping;"Oh wake her, wake her," he hoarsely cried,  "I know she is only sleeping."
He kissed the cold and clammy face  Once full of life and gladness,He smoothed her curls, he chaffed her hands,  He raised her up in his madness.
Too late—too late—your loving words  Can stir her pulses never;Yours be the cold and lifeless form.  But the soul has gone forever.
O heavenly child, sweet be thy sleep  Among the saintly dead.What a sad, sad thing, is the form of Love  When the beautiful soul has fled.