She skimmed sour cream with a wide flat spoon Of ancient pewter tarnished black and sere; It was the last of things that she held dear.... Her set mouth caught the humming of a tune Her heart would faintly sing; still all too soon A toll was paid to weedy stubborn sod With the loam she packed in a barrel-hod That interred her youth in a still lagoon. Downy chicks she fed that huddled to each other, Then brushed the floor of sand the men-folk track; Sheep were sheared of fleece from trembling back, Staring bewildered at each bleating brother. Yet when her small son kissed her shriveled lips, She tasted nectar only wild bee sips. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CHILD ALONE: 4. PICTURE-BOOKS IN WINTER by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON GILBERT: 1. THE GARDEN by CHARLOTTE BRONTE HEROES by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON SAINT PHILIP NERI AND THE YOUTH by JOHN BYROM THE AUXILIARY CRUISER by NOEL MARCUS FRANCIS CORBETT THE RAINBOW (1) by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE |