Classic and Contemporary Poetry
LITTLE MATTIE, by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Dead! Thirteen a month ago! Last Line: Rather than such angels, lord! Subject(s): Death - Children; Death - Babies | ||||||||
I DEAD! Thirteen a month ago! Short and narrow her life's walk; Lover's love she could not know Even by a dream or talk: Too young to be glad of youth, Missing honor, labor, rest, And the warmth of a babe's mouth At the blossom of her breast. Must you pity her for this And for all the loss it is, You, her mother, with wet face, Having had all in your case? II Just so young but yesternight, Now she is as old as death. Meek, obedient in your sight, Gentle to a beck or breath Only on last Monday! Yours, Answering you like silver bells Lightly touched! An hour matures: You can teach her nothing else. She has seen the mystery hid Under Egypt's pyramid: By those eyelids pale and close Now she knows what Rhamses knows. III Cross her quiet hands, and smooth Down her patient locks of silk, Cold and passive as in truth You your fingers in spilt milk Drew along a marble floor; But her lips you cannot wring Into saying a word more, 'Yes,' or 'No,' or such a thing: Though you call and beg and wreak Half your soul out in a shriek, She will lie there in default And most innocent revolt. IV Ay, and if she spoke, maybe She would answer, like the Son, 'What is now 'twixt thee and me?' Dreadful answer! better none. Yours on Monday, God's to-day! Yours, your child, your blood, your heart, Called ... you called her, did you say, 'Little Mattie' for your part? Now already it sounds strange, And you wonder, in this change, What He calls his angel-creature, Higher up than you can reach her. V 'T was a green and easy world As she took it; room to play (Though one's hair might get uncurled At the far end of the day). What she suffered she shook off In the sunshine; what she sinned She could pray on high enough To keep safe above the wind. If reproved by God or you, 'T was to better her, she knew; And if crossed, she gathered still 'T was to cross out something ill. VI You, you had the right, you thought, To survey her with sweet scorn, Poor gay child, who had not caught Yet the octave-stretch forlorn Of your larger wisdom! Nay, Now your places are changed so, In that same superior way She regards you dull and low As you did herself exempt From life's sorrows. Grand contempt Of the spirits risen awhile, Who look back with such a smile! VII There's the sting of't. That, I think, Hurts the most a thousandfold! To feel sudden, at a wink, Some dear child we used to scold, Praise, love both ways, kiss and tease, Teach and tumble as our own, All its curls about our knees, Rise up suddenly full-grown. Who could wonder such a sight Made a woman mad outright? Show me Michael with the sword Rather than such angels, Lord! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LOST CHILDREN by RANDALL JARRELL THE MOURNER by LOUISE MOREY BOWMAN MELANCHOLY; AN ODE by WILLIAM BROOME SISTERS IN ARMS by AUDRE LORDE A BOTANICAL TROPE by WILLIAM MEREDITH FOR MOHAMMED ZEID OF GAZA, AGE 15 by NAOMI SHIHAB NYE A CHILD'S THOUGHT OF GOD by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING |
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