Her baby brother laughed last night, The blind child asked her mother why; It was the light that caught his eye. Would she might laugh to see that light! The presence of a stiffened corse Is sad enough; but, to my mind, The presence of a child that's blind, In a green garden, is far worse. She felt my cloth -- for worldly place; She felt my face -- if I was good; My face lost more than half its blood, For fear her hand would wrongly trace. We're in the garden, where are bees And flowers, and birds, and butterflies; One greedy fledgling runs and cries For all the food his parent sees! I see them all: flowers of all kind, The sheep and cattle on the leas; The houses up the hills, the trees -- But I am dumb, for she is blind. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON BOARD THE '76; WRITTEN FOR BRYANT'S SEVENTIETH BIRTHDAY by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: CARL HAMBLIN by EDGAR LEE MASTERS VISIONS OF THE WORLDS VANITIE by EDMUND SPENSER BEAUTIFUL SNOW by JOHN WHITAKER WATSON AUTUMN WOODS by ANNA M. ACKERMANN MIRTH by EDITH COURTENAY BABBITT THE DEATH OF HAMPDEN by PAKENHAM THOMAS BEATTY |