A LITTLE maiden met me in the lane, And smiled a smile so very fain, So full of trust and happiness, I could not choose but bless The child, that she should have such grace To laugh into my face. She never could have known me; but I thought It was the common joy that wrought Within the little creature's heart, As who should say: -- "Thou art As I; the heaven is bright above us; And there is God to love us. And I am but a little gleeful maid, And thou art big, and old, and staid; But the blue hills have made thee mild As is a little child. Wherefore I laugh that thou may'st see -- O, laugh! O, laugh with me!" A pretty challenge! Then I turned me round, And straight the sober truth I found. For I was not alone; behind me stood, Beneath his load of wood, He that of right the smile possessed -- Her father manifest. O, blest be God! that such an overplus Of joy is given to us: That that sweet innocent Gave me the gift she never meant, A gift secure and permanent! For, howsoe'er the smile had birth, It is an added glory on the earth. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STUDY FOR A GEOGRAPHICAL TRAIL; 2. ILLINOIS by CLARENCE MAJOR FISHERMAN IN SONGKHLA by KAREN SWENSON ARIZONA POEMS: 2. MEXICAN QUARTER by JOHN GOULD FLETCHER LAUSANNE: IN GIBBON'S OLD GARDEN by THOMAS HARDY THE BANNER OF THE JEW by EMMA LAZARUS THE EAGLE THAT IS FORGOTTEN by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY AN EGYPTIAN PULLED GLASS BOTTLE IN THE SHAPE OF A FISH by MARIANNE MOORE |