@2T@1HERE are two pictures hanging on my wall: One is the Woman of Dagnan-Bouveret Mary Madonna, with sad, dark eyes that say Hidden and holy things, her peasant shawl Folding her babe and breast; the other, call "My Mother in Old Age," gracious and gray, Hers is a lonely sleeping, long leagues away, Nor can she hear her son's prayers passional. But sometimes the two faces dim and blur, The darks and deeps are mingled, the lights turn Trembling toward one another, and I see Then, as with subtler vision, the eyes of her, My mother, from the Virgin's aureole yearn, And Mary Maiden gray the mother of me! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TEARS AND KISSES by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON THE DEATH OF SLAVERY by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT SCHOOLBOYS IN WINTER by JOHN CLARE YOUTH AND CUPID by ELIZABETH I NEW ENGLAND'S DEAD! by ISAAC MCLELLAN JR. BY BLUE ONTARIO'S SHORE by WALT WHITMAN |