The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 515 pages of information about The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 2.

The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 515 pages of information about The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 2.
Once having seen her clasp with fond embrace
This Child, I chanted to myself a lay, 10
Endeavouring, in our English tongue, to trace
Such things as she unto the Babe might say:  [4]
And thus, from what I heard and knew, or guessed, [5]
My song the workings of her heart expressed.

I “Dear Babe, thou daughter of another, 15
One moment let me be thy mother! 
An infant’s face and looks are thine
And sure a mother’s heart is mine: 
Thy own dear mother’s far away,
At labour in the harvest field:  20
Thy little sister is at play;—­
What warmth, what comfort would it yield
To my poor heart, if thou wouldst be
One little hour a child to me!

II “Across the waters I am come, 25
And I have left a babe at home: 
A long, long way of land and sea! 
Come to me—­I’m no enemy: 
I am the same who at thy side
Sate yesterday, and made a nest 30
For thee, sweet Baby!—­thou hast tried,
Thou know’st the pillow of my breast;
Good, good art thou:—­alas! to me
Far more than I can be to thee.

III “Here, little Darling, dost thou lie; 35
An infant thou, a mother I! 
Mine wilt thou be, thou hast no fears;
Mine art thou—­spite of these my tears. 
Alas! before I left the spot,
My baby and its dwelling-place; 40
The nurse said to me, ’Tears should not
Be shed upon an infant’s face,
It was unlucky’—­no, no, no;
No truth is in them who say so!

IV “My own dear Little-one will sigh, 45
Sweet Babe! and they will let him die. 
‘He pines,’ they’ll say, ’it is his doom,
And you may see his hour is come.’ 
Oh! had he but thy cheerful smiles,
Limbs stout as thine, and lips as gay, 50
Thy looks, thy cunning, and thy wiles,
And countenance like a summer’s day,
They would have hopes of him;—­and then
I should behold his face again!

V “’Tis gone—­like dreams that we forget; 55
There was a smile or two—­yet—­yet [6]
I can remember them, I see
The smiles, worth all the world to me. 
Dear Baby!  I must lay thee down;
Thou troublest me with strange alarms; 60
Smiles hast thou, bright [7] ones of thy own;
I cannot keep thee in my arms;
For they confound me;—­where—­where is
That last, that sweetest smile of his? [8]

VI “Oh! how I love thee!—­we will stay 65
Together here this one half day. 
My sister’s child, who bears my name,
From France to sheltering England came; [9]
She with her mother crossed the sea;
The babe and mother near me dwell:  70
Yet does my yearning heart to thee
Turn rather, though I love her well:  [10]
Rest, little Stranger, rest thee here! 
Never was any child more dear!

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.