The morning comes, but brings no sun; The sky with storm is overrun; And here I sit in my room alone, And feel, as I hear the tempest moan, Like one who hath lost the last and best, The dearest dweller from his breast!
Where is your ancient courage? You were us'd To say, extremity was the trier of spirits;
I miss thee, my mother! thy image is still The deepest impress'd on my heart, And the tablet so faithful in death must be chill, Ere a line of that image depart.
Eliza Cook's Poems Sweet is the image of the brooding dove! Holy as heaven a mother's tender love! The love of many prayers, and many tears, Which changes not with dim declining years- The only love, which, on this teeming earth, Asks no return for passion's wayward birth. Mrs. Norton's Dream.
That conimon chances common men could bear; Ah! bless'd are they for whom, 'mid all their
That when the sea was calm, all boats alike Show'd mastership in floating; Fortune's blows, When most struck home, being gentle wounded,
A noble calmness. You were us'd to load me With precepts that would make invincible The heart that conn'd them.
Shaks. Coriolanus. The mother, in her office, holds the key Of the soul; and she it is who stamps the coin Of character, and makes the being who would be a savage,
But for her gentle cares, a Christian man. Then crown her Queen o' the world.
Old Play. Maternal love! thou word that sums all bliss, Gives and receives all bliss,-fullest when most Thou givest! spring-head of all felicity, Deepest when most is drawn! emblem of God! O'erflowing most when greatest numbers drink! Pollock's Course of Time. There is none
In all this cold and hollow world, no fount Of deep, strong, deathless love, save that within A mother's heart!
Mrs. Hemans's Siege of Valencia.
The same fond mother bent at night O'er each fair sleeping brow; She had each folded flower in sight.
That faithful and unalter'd love remains; Who, life wreck'd round them-hunted from their
And by all else forsaken or distress'd — Claim in one heart, their sanctuary and shrine As I, my mother, claim'd my place in thine! Mrs. Norton. She was my friend — I had but her no more, No other upon earth—and as for heaven, I am as they that seek a sign, to whom No sign is given. My mother! Oh, my mother! Taylor's Edwin the Fair. Would, Mother, thou couldst hear me tell
How oft, amid my brief career, For sins and follies lov'd too well,
Hath fallen the free, repentant tear. And, in the waywardness of youth, How better thoughts have given to me Contempt for error, love for truth, 'Mid sweet remembrances of thee.
Her words and prayers were my young spirit o
For when she us'd to leave
The fireside every eve,
I knew it was for prayer that she withdrew. How often has the thought
Of my mourn'd mother brought Peace to my troubled spirit, and new power The tempter to repel! Mother, thou knowest well
That thou hast bless'd me since my natal hour. John Pierpont
My mother! -manhood's anxious brow And sterner cares have long been mine. Yet turn I to thee fondly now,
As when upon thy bosom's shrine
My infant griefs were gently hush'd to rest, And thy low whisper'd prayers my slumber bless a George W Bethune
I ve por'd o'er many a yellow page Of ancient wisdom, and have won, Perchance, a scholar's name but sage
Or bard have never taught thy son Lessons so dear, so fraught with holy truth, As those his mother's faith shed on his youth. George W. Bethune.
A mother's love-how sweet the name!
A noble, pure, and tender flame,
Enkindled from above,
To bless a heart of earthly mould;
The warmest love that can grow cold;
This is a mother's love.
James Montgomery. There are smiles and tears in the mother's eyes, For her new-born babe beside her lies; Oh, heaven of bliss! when the heart o'erflows With the rapture a mother only knows!
Henry Ware, Jr. Our little ones inquire of me, where is their mother gone?
What answer can I make to them, except with tears alone: For if I say, to heaven-
How far is it, and where, and when their mother
Yes, I have left the golden shore,
Where childhood 'midst the roses play'd: Those sunny dreams will come no more,
That youth a long bright Sabbath made. Yet while those dreams of memory's eye Arise in many a glittering train,
My soul goes back to infancy,
And hears my mother's song again!
Number thy lamps of love, and tell me now How many canst thou re-light at the stars, And blush not at their burning? One-one only- Lit while your pulses by one heart kept time, And fed with faithful fondness to your grave — (Though sometimes with a hand stretch'd back from heaven)
Steadfast through all things-near when most forgot -
And with its finger of unerring truth Pointing the lost way in thy darkest hour- One lamp-thy mother's love— amid the stars Shall lift its pure flame changeless, and before The throne of God burn through eternity— Holy-as it was lit and lent thee here.
My mother! at that holy name Within my bosom there's a gush Of feeling which no time can tame, A feeling which for years of fame I would not, could not crush!
George P. Morris. When we see the flower seeds wafted From the nurturing mother tree, Tell we can, wherever planted,
What the harvesting will be; Never from the blasting thistle Was there gather'd golden grain,-
Willis Gaylord Clark. Thus the seal the child receiveth From its mother will remain.
And while my soul retains the power
To think upon each faded year,
In every bright or shadow'd hour,
My heart shall hold my mother dear. The hills may tower- the waves may rise, And roll between my home and me; Yet shall my quenchless memories Turn with undying love to thee.
Willis Gaylord Clark, Mother! dear mother! the feelings nurst As I hung at thy bosom, clung round thee first. "I was the earliest link in love's warm chain - "I' is the only one that will long remain: And as year by year, and day by day, Some friend still trusted drops away, Mother! dear mother! oh! dost thou see How the shorten'd chain brings me nearer thee? Willis's Earlier Poems.
Mrs. Hale's Poems. Earth held no symbol, had no living sign To image forth the mother's deathless love; And so the tender care the righteous prove, Beneath the ever-watching Eye divine, Was given as type to show how pure a shrine The mother's heart was hallow'd from above; And how her mortal hopes must intertwine
With hopes immortal;-and she may not move From this high station which her Saviour seal'd, When in maternal arms he lay reveal'd.
Mrs. Hale's Poems, O wondrous power! how little understood, — Entrusted to the mother's mind alone, To fashion genius, form the soul for good, Inspire a West, or train a Washington! Mrs. Hale's Poems.
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