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Charlotte Mew

To a Child in Death

You would have scoffed if we had told you yesterday
Love made us feel, or so it was with me, like some great bird
Trying to hold and shelter you in its strong wing;—
A gay little shadowy smile would have tossed us back such a solemn word,
And it was not for that you were listening
When so quietly you slipped away
With half the music of the world unheard.
What shall we do with this strange summer, meant for you,—
Dear, if we see the winter through
What shall be done with spring?
This, this is the victory of the Grave; here is death’s sting,
That is not strong enough, our strongest wing.

But what of His who like a Father pitieth?
His Son was also, once, a little thing,
The wistfullest child that ever drew breath,
Chased by a sword from Bethlehem and in the busy house at Nazareth
Playing with little rows of nails, watching the carpenter’s hammer swing,
Long years before His hands and feet were tied
And by a hammer and the three great nails He died,
Of youth, of Spring,
Of sorrow, of loneliness, of victory the King,
Under the shadow of that wing.

About the poet

Charlotte MewCharlotte Mew
1869-1928

 
By the same poet
Sea Love
On the Road to the Sea
The Peddler
Madeleine in Church
The Farmer’s Bride
The Trees are Down
Ken
In Nunhead Cemetery
The Cenotaph
On the Asylum Road
June, 1915
The Call
I Have Been Through the Gates
Beside the Bed
 
Related books
Charlotte Mew at amazon.co.uk

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