Textarchiv - Elizabeth Barrett Browning https://www.textarchiv.com/elizabeth-barrett-browning English poet. Born on 6 March 1806 in Kelloe, Durham, England. Died 29 June 1861 in Florence, Italy. de A Child's Grave at Florence https://www.textarchiv.com/elizabeth-barrett-browning/a-childs-grave-at-florence <div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>I.</p> <p>Of English blood, of Tuscan birth,<br /> What country should we give her?<br /> Instead of any on the earth,<br /> The civic Heavens receive her.</p> <p>II.</p> <p>And here among the English tombs<br /> In Tuscan ground we lay her,<br /> While the blue Tuscan sky endomes<br /> Our English words of prayer.</p> <p>III.</p> <p>A little child!--how long she lived,<br /> By months, not years, is reckoned:<br /> Born in one July, she survived<br /> Alone to see a second.</p> <p>IV.</p> <p>Bright-featured, as the July sun<br /> Her little face still played in,<br /> And splendours, with her birth begun,<br /> Had had no time for fading.</p> <p>V.</p> <p>So, LILY, from those July hours,<br /> No wonder we should call her;<br /> She looked such kinship to the flowers,--<br /> Was but a little taller.</p> <p>VI.</p> <p>A Tuscan Lily,--only white,<br /> As Dante, in abhorrence<br /> Of red corruption, wished aright<br /> The lilies of his Florence.</p> <p>VII.</p> <p>We could not wish her whiter,--her<br /> Who perfumed with pure blossom<br /> The house--a lovely thing to wear<br /> Upon a mother&#039;s bosom!</p> <p>VIII.</p> <p>This July creature thought perhaps<br /> Our speech not worth assuming;<br /> She sat upon her parents&#039; laps<br /> And mimicked the gnat&#039;s humming;</p> <p>IX.</p> <p>Said &quot;father,&quot; &quot;mother&quot;--then left off,<br /> For tongues celestial, fitter:<br /> Her hair had grown just long enough<br /> To catch heaven&#039;s jasper-glitter.</p> <p>X.</p> <p>Babes! Love could always hear and see<br /> Behind the cloud that hid them.<br /> &quot;Let little children come to Me,<br /> And do not thou forbid them.&quot;</p> <p>XI.</p> <p>So, unforbidding, have we met,<br /> And gently here have laid her,<br /> Though winter is no time to get<br /> The flowers that should o&#039;erspread her:</p> <p>XII.</p> <p>We should bring pansies quick with spring,<br /> Rose, violet, daffodilly,<br /> And also, above everything,<br /> White lilies for our Lily.</p> <p>XIII.</p> <p>Nay, more than flowers, this grave exacts,--<br /> Glad, grateful attestations<br /> Of her sweet eyes and pretty acts,<br /> With calm renunciations.</p> <p>XIV.</p> <p>Her very mother with light feet<br /> Should leave the place too earthy,<br /> Saying &quot;The angels have thee, Sweet,<br /> Because we are not worthy.&quot;</p> <p>XV.</p> <p>But winter kills the orange-buds,<br /> The gardens in the frost are,<br /> And all the heart dissolves in floods,<br /> Remembering we have lost her.</p> <p>XVI.</p> <p>Poor earth, poor heart,--too weak, too weak<br /> To miss the July shining!<br /> Poor heart!--what bitter words we speak<br /> When God speaks of resigning!</p> <p>XVII.</p> <p>Sustain this heart in us that faints,<br /> Thou God, the self-existent!<br /> We catch up wild at parting saints<br /> And feel Thy heaven too distant.</p> <p>XVIII.</p> <p>The wind that swept them out of sin<br /> Has ruffled all our vesture:<br /> On the shut door that let them in<br /> We beat with frantic gesture,--</p> <p>XIX.</p> <p>To us, us also, open straight!<br /> The outer life is chilly;<br /> Are _we_ too, like the earth, to wait<br /> Till next year for our Lily?</p> <p>XX.</p> <p>--Oh, my own baby on my knees,<br /> My leaping, dimpled treasure,<br /> At every word I write like these,<br /> Clasped close with stronger pressure!</p> <p>XXI.</p> <p>Too well my own heart understands,--<br /> At every word beats fuller--<br /> My little feet, my little hands,<br /> And hair of Lily&#039;s colour!</p> <p>XXII.</p> <p>But God gives patience, Love learns strength,<br /> And Faith remembers promise,<br /> And Hope itself can smile at length<br /> On other hopes gone from us.</p> <p>XXIII.</p> <p>Love, strong as Death, shall conquer Death,<br /> Through struggle made more glorious:<br /> This mother stills her sobbing breath,<br /> Renouncing yet victorious.</p> <p>XXIV.</p> <p>Arms, empty of her child, she lifts<br /> With spirit unbereaven,--<br /> &quot;God will not all take back His gifts;<br /> My Lily&#039;s mine in heaven.</p> <p>XXV.</p> <p>&quot;Still mine! maternal rights serene<br /> Not given to another!<br /> The crystal bars shine faint between<br /> The souls of child and mother.</p> <p>XXVI.</p> <p>&quot;Meanwhile,&quot; the mother cries, &quot;content!<br /> Our love was well divided:<br /> Its sweetness following where she went,<br /> Its anguish stayed where I did.</p> <p>XXVII.</p> <p>&quot;Well done of God, to halve the lot,<br /> And give her all the sweetness;<br /> To us, the empty room and cot,--<br /> To her, the Heaven&#039;s completeness.</p> <p>XXVIII.</p> <p>&quot;To us, this grave,--to her, the rows<br /> The mystic palm-trees spring in;<br /> To us, the silence in the house,--<br /> To her, the choral singing.</p> <p>XXIX.</p> <p>&quot;For her, to gladden in God&#039;s view,--<br /> For us, to hope and bear on.<br /> Grow, Lily, in thy garden new,<br /> Beside the Rose of Sharon!</p> <p>XXX.</p> <p>&quot;Grow fast in heaven, sweet Lily clipped,<br /> In love more calm than this is,<br /> And may the angels dewy-lipped<br /> Remind thee of our kisses!</p> <p>XXXI.</p> <p>&quot;While none shall tell thee of our tears,<br /> These human tears now falling,<br /> Till, after a few patient years,<br /> One home shall take us all in.</p> <p>XXXII.</p> <p>&quot;Child, father, mother--who, left out?<br /> Not mother, and not father!<br /> And when, our dying couch about,<br /> The natural mists shall gather,</p> <p>XXXIII.</p> <p>&quot;Some smiling angel close shall stand<br /> In old Correggio&#039;s fashion,<br /> And bear a LILY in his hand,<br /> For death&#039;s ANNUNCIATION.&quot;</p> </div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/elizabeth-barrett-browning" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">Elizabeth Barrett Browning</a></div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-releasedate field-type-number-integer field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:datePublished">1890</div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/elizabeth-barrett-browning/a-childs-grave-at-florence" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="A Child&#039;s Grave at Florence" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span> Mon, 16 Jan 2017 21:31:45 +0000 mrbot 5707 at https://www.textarchiv.com