Algernon Charles Swinburne
A little soul scarce
fledged for earth
Takes wing with heaven again for goal
Even while we
hailed as fresh from birth
A little soul.
Our thoughts ring sad as
bells that toll,
Not knowing beyond this blind world's girth
What things
are writ in heaven's full scroll.
Our fruitfulness is there but
dearth,
And all things held in time's control
Seem there, perchance, ill
dreams, not worth
A little soul.
The little feet that never
trod
Earth, never strayed in field or street,
What hand leads upward back
to God
The little feet?
A rose
in June's most honied heat,
When life makes keen the kindling sod,
Was not
so soft and warm and sweet.
Their pilgrimage's period
A few swift moons
have seen complete
Since mother's hands first clasped and shod
The little
feet.
The little hands that never sought
Earth's prizes,
worthless all as sands,
What gift has death, God's servant, brought
The
little hands?
We ask: but love's
self silent stands,
Love, that lends eyes and wings to thought
To search
where death's dim heaven expands.
Ere this, perchance, though love know
nought,
Flowers
fill them, grown in lovelier lands,
Where hands of guiding angels
caught
The little hands.
The little eyes that never
knew
Light other than of dawning skies,
What new life now lights up
anew
The little eyes?
Who knows but on their sleep may rise
Such
light as never heaven let through
To lighten earth from Paradise?
No
storm, we know, may change the blue
Soft heaven that haply death
descries
No tears, like these in ours, bedew
The little
eyes.
Was life so strange, so sad the sky,
So strait the wide
world's range,
He would not stay to wonder why
Was life so
strange?
Was earth's fair house a joyless grange
Beside that house on
high
Whence Time that bore him failed to estrange?
That here at once
his soul put by
All gifts of time and change,
And left us heavier hearts
to sigh
'Was life so strange?'
Angel by name love called him,
seeing so fair
The sweet small frame;
Meet to be called, if ever man's
child were,
Angel by name.
Rose-bright and warm from heaven's own
heart he came,
And might not bear
The cloud that covers earth's wan face
with shame.
His little light of life was all too rare
And soft a
flame:
Heaven yearned for him till angels hailed him there
Angel by
name.
The song that smiled upon his birthday here
Weeps on the
grave that holds him undefiled
Whose loss makes bitterer than a soundless
tear
The song that smiled.
His name crowned once the mightiest ever
styled
Sovereign of arts,
and angel: fate and fear
Knew then their master, and were
reconciled.
But we saw born beneath some tenderer sphere
Michael, an
angel and a little child,
Whose loss bows down to weep upon his bier
The
song that smiled.