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Of harvest; and fulfilment in the grain。

Yea; she is wont to labor in the field;

Delights to heap; at sunset; on the wain



Festoons and coronals of the golden yield。

A triumph is the labor of her soul;

Sublime along eternity revealed。



Lo; everlastingly in her control;

Under the even measure of her breath;

Like crested waves the onward centuries roll。



Nor to far heaven her spirit wandereth;

Nor lifteth she her voice in barren prayer;

Nor trembleth at appearances of death。



She; godlike in her womanhood; will fare

Calm…visaged and heroic to the end。

The homestead is her most especial care;



She loves the sacred hearth: she will defend

Her gods from desecration of the vile。

Fierce; like a wounded tigress; she can rend



Whatever may have entered to defile。

I see her in the evening by the fire;

And in her eyes; illumined from the pile



Of blazing logs; a motherly desire

Glows like the moulded passion of a rose;

Beautiful is her presence in the bower:



Her spirit is the spirit of repose。

Mankind shall hold her motherhood in awe:

Woman is she indeed; and not of those



That he with sacramental gold must draw

Discreetly to his chamber in the night;

Or bind to him with fetters of the law。



He holds her by a spiritual right。

With diamond and with pearl he need not sue;

Nor will she deck herself for his delight:



Beauty is the adornment of the true。

She shall possess for ornament and gem

A flower; the glowworm; or the drop of dew:



More innocently fair than all of them;

It will not even shame her if she make

A coronal of stars her diadem。



Though she is but a vision; I can take

Courage from her。  I feel her arrowy beam

Already; for her spirit is awake;



And passes down the future like a gleam; …

Thus have I made the woman of my dream。



Harold Monro '1879…1932'





THE SHEPHERDESS



She walks … the lady of my delight …

A shepherdess of sheep。

Her flocks are thoughts。  She keeps them white;

She guards them from the steep。

She feeds them on the fragrant height;

And folds them in for sleep。



She roams maternal hills and bright;

Dark valleys safe and deep。

Into that tender breast at night

The chastest stars may peep。

She walks … the lady of my delight …

A shepherdess of sheep。



She holds her little thoughts in sight;

Though gay they run and leap。

She is so circumspect and right;

She has her soul to keep。

She walks … the lady of my delight …

A shepherdess of sheep。



Alice Meynell '1853…1922'





A PORTRAIT



Mother and maid and soldier; bearing best

Her girl's lithe body under matron gray;

And opening new eyes on each new day

With faith concealed and courage unconfessed;

Jealous to cloak a blessing in a jest;

Clothe beauty carefully in disarray;

And love absurdly; that no word betray

The worship all her deeds make manifest:



Armored in smiles; a motley Britomart …

Her lance is high adventure; tipped with scorn;

Her banner to the suns and winds unfurled;

Washed white with laughter; and beneath her heart;

Shrined in a garland of laborious thorn;

Blooms the unchanging Rose of all the World。



Brian Hooker '1880…





THE WIFE



The little Dreams of Maidenhood …

I put them all away

As tenderly as mother would

The toys of yesterday;

When little children grow to men

Too over…wise for play。



The little dreams I put aside …

I loved them every one;

And yet since moon…blown buds must hide

Before the noon…day sun;

I close them wistfully away

And give the key to none。



O little Dreams of Maidenhood …

Lie quietly; nor care

If some day in an idle mood

I; searching unaware

Through some closed corner of my heart;

Should laugh to find you there。



Theodosia Garrison '1874…





〃TRUSTY; DUSKY; VIVID; TRUE〃



Trusty; dusky; vivid; true;

With eyes of gold and bramble…dew;

Steel true and blade straight

The great Artificer made my mate。



Honor; anger; valor; fire;

A love that life could never tire;

Death quench; or evil stir;

The mighty Master gave to her。



Teacher; tender comrade; wife;

A fellow…farer true through life;

Heart…whole and soul…free;

The August Father gave to me。



Robert Louis Stevenson '1850…1894'





THE SHRINE



There is a shrine whose golden gate

Was opened by the Hand of God;

It stands serene; inviolate;

Though millions have its pavement trod;

As fresh; as when the first sunrise

Awoke the lark in Paradise。



'Tis compassed with the dust and toil

Of common days; yet should there fall

A single speck; a single soil

Upon the whiteness of its wall;

The angels' tears in tender rain

Would make the temple theirs again。



Without; the world is tired and old;

But; once within the enchanted door;

The mists of time are backward rolled;

And creeds and ages are no more;

But all the human…hearted meet

In one communion vast and sweet。




I enter … all is simply fair;

Nor incense…clouds; nor carven throne;

But in the fragrant morning air

A gentle lady sits alone;

My mother … ah! whom should I see

Within; save ever only thee?



Digby Mackworth Dolben '1848…1867'





THE VOICE



As I went down the hill I heard

The laughter of the countryside;

For; rain being past; the whole land stirred

With new emotion; like a bride。

I scarce had left the grassy lane;

When something made me catch my breath:

A woman called; and called again;

Elizabeth! Elizabeth!



It was my mother's name。  A part

Of wounded memory sprang to tears;

And the few violets of my heart

Shook in the wind of happier years。

Quicker than magic came the face

That once was sun and moon for me;

The garden shawl; the cap of lace;

The collie's head against her knee。



Mother; who findest out a way

To pass the sentinels; and stand

Behind my chair at close of day;

To touch me … almost … with thy hand;

Deep in my breast; how sure; how clear;

The lamp of love burns on till death! …

How trembles if I chance to hear

Elizabeth!  Elizabeth!



Norman Gale '1862…





MOTHER



I have praised many loved ones in my song;

And yet I stand

Before her shrine; to whom all things belong;

With empty hand。



Perhaps the ripening future holds a time

For things unsaid;

Not now; men do not celebrate in rhyme

Their daily bread。



Theresa Helburn '1888…





AD MATREM



Oft in the after days; when thou and I

Have fallen from the scope of human view;

When; both together; under the sweet sky;

We sleep beneath the daisies and the dew;

Men will recall thy gracious presence bland;

Conning the pictured sweetness of thy face;

Will pore o'er paintings by thy plastic hand;

And vaunt thy skill and tell thy deeds of grace。

Oh; may they then; who crown thee with true bays;

Saying; 〃What love unto her son she bore!〃

Make this addition to thy perfect praise;

〃Nor ever yet was mother worshipped more!〃

So shall I live with Thee; and thy dear fame

Shall link my love unto thine honored name。



Julian Fane '1827…1870'





C。 L。 M。



In the dark womb where I began;

My mother's life made me a man。

Through all the months of human birth

Her beauty fed my common earth。

I cannot see; nor breathe; nor stir;

But through the death of some of her。



Down in the darkness of the grave

She cannot see the life she gave。

For all her love; she cannot tell

Whether I use it ill or well;

Nor knock at dusty doors to find

Her beauty dusty in the mind。



If the grave's gates could be undone;

She would not know her little son;

I am so grown。  If we should meet;

She would pass by me in the street;

Unless my soul's face let her see

My sense of what she did for me。



What have I done to keep in mind

My debt to her and womankind?

What woman's happier life repays

Her for those months of wretched days?

For all my mouthless body leeched

Ere Birth's releasing hell was reached?



What have I done; or tried; or said

In thanks to that dear woman dead?

Men triumph over women still;

Men trample women's rights at will;

And man's lust roves the world untamed。 。 。

O grave; keep shut lest I be shamed。



John Masefield '1878…













STEPPING WESTWARD













STEPPING WESTWARD



〃What; you are stepping westward?〃 … 〃Yea。〃

… 'Twould be a wildish destiny;

If we; who thus together roam


In a strange Land; and far from home;

Were in this place the guests of Chance:

Yet who would stop; or fear to advance

Though home or shelter he had none;

With such a sky to lead him on?



The dewy ground was dark and cold;

Behind; all gloomy to behold;

And stepping westward seemed to be

A kind of heavenly destiny:

I liked the greeting; 'twas a sound

Of something without place or bound;

And seemed to give me spiritual right

T

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