A Child’s Grave at Florence by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
The music player is only available for users with at least 1,000 points.

Download "A Child’s Grave at Florence"

Album The Poetical Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Vol. IV

A Child’s Grave at Florence by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

A Child’s Grave at Florence Annotated

I.
Of English blood, of Tuscan birth,
&nbspWhat country should we give her?
Instead of any on the earth,
&nbspThe civic Heavens receive her.

II.
And here among the English tombs
&nbspIn Tuscan ground we lay her,
While the blue Tuscan sky endomes
&nbspOur English words of prayer.

III.
A little child!—how long she lived,
&nbspBy months, not years, is reckoned:
Born in one July, she survived
&nbspAlone to see a second.

IV.
Bright-featured, as the July sun
&nbspHer little face still played in,
And splendours, with her birth begun,
&nbspHad had no time for fading.

V.
So, Lily, from those July hours,
&nbspNo wonder we should call her;
She looked such kinship to the flowers,—
&nbspWas but a little taller.

VI.
A Tuscan Lily,—only white,
&nbspAs Dante, in abhorrence
Of red corruption, wished aright
&nbspThe lilies of his Florence.

VII.
We could not wish her whiter,—her
&nbspWho perfumed with pure blossom
The house—a lovely thing to wear
&nbspUpon a mother’s bosom!

VIII.
This July creature thought perhaps
&nbspOur speech not worth assuming;
She sat upon her parents’ laps
&nbspAnd mimicked the gnat’s humming;

IX.
Said “father,” “mother”—then left off,
&nbspFor tongues celestial, fitter:
Her hair had grown just long enough
&nbspTo catch heaven’s jasper-glitter.

X.
Babes! Love could always hear and see
&nbspBehind the cloud that hid them.
“Let little children come to Me,
&nbspAnd do not thou forbid them.”

XI.
So, unforbidding, have we met,
&nbspAnd gently here have laid her,
Though winter is no time to get
&nbspThe flowers that should o’erspread her:

XII.
We should bring pansies quick with spring,
&nbspRose, violet, daffodilly,
And also, above everything,
&nbspWhite lilies for our Lily.

XIII.
Nay, more than flowers, this grave exacts,—
&nbspGlad, grateful attestations
Of her sweet eyes and pretty acts,
&nbspWith calm renunciations.

XIV.
Her very mother with light feet
&nbspShould leave the place too earthy,
Saying “The angels have thee, Sweet,
&nbspBecause we are not worthy.”

XV.
But winter kills the orange-buds,
&nbspThe gardens in the frost are,
And all the heart dissolves in floods,
&nbspRemembering we have lost her.

XVI.
Poor earth, poor heart,—too weak, too weak
&nbspTo miss the July shining!
Poor heart!—what bitter words we speak
&nbspWhen God speaks of resigning!

XVII.
Sustain this heart in us that faints,
&nbspThou God, the self-existent!
We catch up wild at parting saints
&nbspAnd feel Thy heaven too distant.

XVIII.
The wind that swept them out of sin
&nbspHas ruffled all our vesture:
On the shut door that let them in
&nbspWe beat with frantic gesture,—

XIX.
To us, us also, open straight!
&nbspThe outer life is chilly;
Are we too, like the earth, to wait
&nbspTill next year for our Lily?

XX.
—Oh, my own baby on my knees,
&nbspMy leaping, dimpled treasure,
At every word I write like these,
&nbspClasped close with stronger pressure!

XXI.
Too well my own heart understands,—
&nbspAt every word beats fuller—
My little feet, my little hands,
&nbspAnd hair of Lily’s colour!

XXII.
But God gives patience, Love learns strength,
&nbspAnd Faith remembers promise,
And Hope itself can smile at length
&nbspOn other hopes gone from us.

XXIII.
Love, strong as Death, shall conquer Death,
&nbspThrough struggle made more glorious:
This mother stills her sobbing breath,
&nbspRenouncing yet victorious.

XXIV.
Arms, empty of her child, she lifts
&nbspWith spirit unbereaven,—
“God will not all take back His gifts;
&nbspMy Lily’s mine in heaven.

XXV.
“Still mine! maternal rights serene
&nbspNot given to another!
The crystal bars shine faint between
&nbspThe souls of child and mother.

XXVI.
“Meanwhile,” the mother cries, “content!
&nbspOur love was well divided:
Its sweetness following where she went,
&nbspIts anguish stayed where I did.

XXVII.
“Well done of God, to halve the lot,
&nbspAnd give her all the sweetness;
To us, the empty room and cot,—
&nbspTo her, the Heaven’s completeness.

XXVIII.
“To us, this grave,—to her, the rows
&nbspThe mystic palm-trees spring in;
To us, the silence in the house,—
&nbspTo her, the choral singing.

XXIX.
“For her, to gladden in God’s view,—
&nbspFor us, to hope and bear on.
Grow, Lily, in thy garden new,
&nbspBeside the Rose of Sharon!

XXX.
“Grow fast in heaven, sweet Lily clipped,
&nbspIn love more calm than this is,
And may the angels dewy-lipped
&nbspRemind thee of our kisses!

XXXI.
“While none shall tell thee of our tears,
&nbspThese human tears now falling,
Till, after a few patient years,
&nbspOne home shall take us all in.

XXXII.
“Child, father, mother—who, left out?
&nbspNot mother, and not father!
And when, our dying couch about,
&nbspThe natural mists shall gather,

XXXIII.
“Some smiling angel close shall stand
&nbspIn old Correggio’s fashion,
And bear a Lily in his hand,
&nbspFor death’s ANNUCIATION."

Your Gateway to High-Quality MP3, FLAC and Lyrics
DownloadMP3FLAC.com